Chopin with Cherries: A Tribute in Verse [selected poems]

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Selected poems from

Chopin with Cherries: A Tribute in Verse

Moonrise Press, 2010, ed. Maja Trochimczyk

Illustrated in color with 48 vintage postcards

www.moonrisepress.com/chopin.html

 

Chopin

William Pillin >

 

Polonaise

Elisabeth Murawski >

 

Ruby and Sapphire

Kerri Buckley >

 

A Study with Cherries

Maja Trochimczyk >

Concerto No. 1, in E minor

on Highway 111, Palm Springs

Ruth Nolan >

Artsy Evening

Ryan Mclellan >

 

Chopin in an Old Church

Rick Lupert >

 

Sewing with Chopin

Katrin Talbot >

 

 

Chopin

William Pillin


Gautier wrote: "His soul weeps and hovers."

I prefer Nietzsche's "in him joy is ascendant."

It is easy to spit clichés at him:

effeminate, tearful, sylph-like . . .


"Sick-room poet" hissed envious Field,

ignoring the tough musical sinews,

the brooding rebellious rages

and the political passions.


True, his wit was exquisite and birdlike

but he knew how to summon the Furies

and spoke for his ravaged nation

in accents as daring as any.


He was elegant and consumptive.

He was successful in the world

and rejoiced over his triumphs.

He loved pretty women - and was loved by them.


*


White and wasting he dotted

with splashes of blood his lunar pages,

carrying death like a singing bird

in his chest, his tissue held together


by dreams and bacilli.  "I used to find him,"

wrote George Sand, "late at night at his piano,

pale, with haggard eyes, his hair almost standing,

and it was some minutes before he knew me."


In Majorca, the doctors

shuddered at his blood-flecked mouth,

burned his belongings, compelled him

to take refuge in a former monastery.


"My stone cell is shaped like a coffin.

You can roar - but always in silence."

When it stormed he wrote the ‘raindrop' prelude

and from the thunder he fashioned an étude.


*


"I work a lot," he wrote to his sister,

"I cross out all the time, I cough without measure."

With death's hand on his slender shoulder

he created ballades, études, nocturnes.


Who wrested

so much from torment?  Fading swiftly

he continued to color his silences,

a condemned man refusing a blindfold.


If he sometimes wept - it was from love, not weakness.

He felt all his life the wing of death's angel

brushing in their sleep the embracing lovers.

Can one truly sing without this terrible knowledge?


*


Of the many men who were haunted

by the night, its gardens and fountains,

who fathomed it as truly as this Ariel of preludes?

The piano shakes like a leaf in the darkness.


The night breathes and triumphs.

Stars and sea-winds

drift through the open window.  The ineffable nocturnes

float away like farewell whispers.

 


 

Polonaise

Elisabeth Murawski

 


In the museum, along

with first editions,

the death mask, the chair


whose arms he gripped

in coughing fits,

a lock of yellow hair.


Was it Sand who clipped it

for a keepsake? She

who whispered


Let me be your lightning rod

as Chopin played

for her ears only,


courting the angels,

stealing the shine

from the Seine. Think


of his wish (a drastic

death certificate)

to have his body opened


that I not be buried alive,

of his heart taken home

to a Warsaw church,


 

of the grave in Père Lachaise

brilliant with roses

and candles, baskets


laden with fruit, of notes

plucked from his roots

that go on singing.



 

Ruby and Sapphire

Kerri Buckley



Evening belongs to Chopin,

crimson silks and sparkling wines, trails of smoke


From balconies, stiff, rustling fabrics of

tailored suits, perfume, chocolate truffles rolled in


Waxed paper cones, shiny as diamonds, as pearls,

and the music - notes one breathes in, holds fully


So it might never

be forgotten, sound of richness, of ruby, of sapphire,


Elegant nod to all refined things,

to the ivory on a piano key, thrown from a window


Into a golden glitter of leaves by Russian soldiers



A Study with Cherries

Maja Trochimczyk


After Etude in C Major, Op. 10, No. 1 and the cherry orchard

of my grandparents, Stanisław and Marianna Wajszczuk


I want a cherry,

a rich, sweet cherry

to sprinkle its dark notes

on my skin, like rainy preludes

drizzling through the air.


Followed by the echoes

of the piano, I climb

a cherry tree to find rest

between fragile branches

and relish the red perfection -

morning cherry music.


Satiated, sleepy,

I hide in the dusty attic.

I crack open the shell

of a walnut to peel

the bitter skin off,

revealing white flesh -

a study in C Major.


Tasted in reverie,

the harmonies seep

through light-filled cracks

between weathered beams

in Grandma's daily ritual

of Chopin at noon.


 

Concerto No. 1, in E minor

on Highway 111, Palm Springs

Ruth Nolan


Lifted, by the sudden desert wind

just east of Palm Springs

rounding Windy Point, 2 a.m.

could sprinkle those stars the way

your hands caress the keyboard

of your mother's piano until the lid slams

shut and father's voice commands you

to stop the noise, stop the noise


Caressed, by the windy desert mid-night,

tickling your hair as you lean

your head against the open window

tantalizes your imagination, you are 12 again

and your hands, together, devour the major

and minor keys until you are one

with the dark void, foot pressing down,

long chords that will linger into dawn


Hugged with warmth, this rushing air

blowing ghosted windmill blades

a 13,000 foot mountain in your eyes

voicing the crisp leaps up and down dorm

stairs with your first boyfriend, who taught

you that this was the musical master, after

all, and it all rushes back to you, this


Styled by elegance of motion, staccato, fortissimo

cresting on the car stereo as you leapfrog

between the lines on the highway

between the spaces of darkness and sound,

blown across the sand dunes into magnificence

 


Artsy Evening

Ryan Mclellan


 

E Major magician,

Chopin, are you listening?


Downloaded your music

for free

because I heard

on Public Radio

that you were "bi-polar"


the clips from

your compositions were

convincing

enough

to spike an interest -

As we prepared

our veggie stir-fry,

she said,

"You seem really -

I don't know - down"

and I heard

a piano

amidst the crackling

of dinner, silverware,

an old LP

and the summer

heat -


 

Chopin in an Old Church

Rick Lupert

 


The pianist performs humble as a river

We are in one of Paris' oldest churches

built when the memory of Jesus was young

like America


You can hear every noise,

the scuffling of a foot

the scratching of my pen

the dueling concertos

from the piano

and someone's cell phone


The acoustics of a stone cathedral

make you feel like you're there


The pianist's fingers

are as confident as rain


Sewing with Chopin

Katrin Talbot


 

As needle and thread

quieted the hem,

Mazurkas

too sad to dance to

serenaded my stitching


and the aching sadness

urged me to keep sewing

all through the day,


mending moments of

heartbreak, hope deferred,

misty loss


while I sat across from Chopin

and listened attentively

as he spoke so eloquently

of the advantages of


a delicate

life




Last Updated on Tuesday, 23 March 2010 07:16  
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