Thursday, February 16, 2012

Water picture

Water Picture
by:May Swenson 
 
In the pond in the park 
all things are doubled:
Long buildings hang and 
wriggle gently. Chimneys 
are bent legs bouncing 
on clouds below. A flag 
wags like a fishhook 
down there in the sky.

The arched stone bridge 
is an eye, with underlid 
in the water. In its lens 
dip crinkled heads with hats 
that don't fall off. Dogs go by, 
barking on their backs. 
A baby, taken to feed the 
ducks, dangles upside-down, 
a pink balloon for a buoy.

Treetops deploy a haze of 
cherry bloom for roots, 
where birds coast belly-up 
in the glass bowl of a hill; 
from its bottom a bunch 
of peanut-munching children 
is suspended by their 
sneakers, waveringly.

A swan, with twin necks 
forming the figure 3, 
steers between two dimpled 
towers doubled. Fondly 
hissing, she kisses herself, 
and all the scene is troubled:
water-windows splinter, 
tree-limbs tangle, the bridge 
folds like a fan.

6 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. If I could, I would copy and paste this whole poem if I were asked which was my favorite part. It creates a perfect image of innocence and purity. It reminds me of my childhood when my world was untouched by corruption and pain. But looking at the title of this poem, it's just a moment captured and forever preserved in nothing but a picture. And that moment exists in a perfect little world we all wish we could live in where no harm would ever come to us.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The arched stone bridge is an eye, with underlid in the water.
    This line right here is my favorite line because I get a desent image out of this. The line talks about how you the reflection of a circle in the pond but in a more creative way. The whole poem is talking about just a simple day in a pond but it's describe with so many images. May Swenson made something more bigger than it really is.

    ReplyDelete
  4. "A swan, with twin necks forming the figure 3, steers between two dimpled towers doubled."
    Based an the title and all the imagery in it this is my favortie part to imagine. I can relate this line to when I see swans or capture the beautiful moments of animals in the water, whether I'm driving by them, or walking past them. This poem reminds me of an exotic, magnificent painting thanks to the title "water picture." I don't think of it as a water painting, I think of it as a picture or painting about things that surround the body of water.

    ReplyDelete
  5. "water-windows splinter, tree-limbs tangle, the bridge folds like a fan."
    The whole purpose I found in this poem is to provide an image and in my opinion this is the most powerful. First the whole poem to me seems kind of happy and then suddenly everything changes and breaks or folds. I also enjoy it because I can clearly image all of this happening. All in all, I like the dark side of this line as to me it demonstrates pain and turning fro happy to sad.

    ReplyDelete
  6. A swan, with twin necks
    forming the figure 3,
    steers between two dimpled
    towers doubled. Fondly
    hissing, she kisses herself,
    and all the scene is troubled:
    water-windows splinter,
    tree-limbs tangle, the bridge
    folds like a fan.

    i like the whole last verse of this poem. It ties everything together in such a organized manner. Plus the imagery in this verse is very clear. It shows that when the swan went to kiss herself (her reflection in the water) that everything got ruined because of that. Trees tangle, and stuff. etc i love the imagery in this poem.

    ReplyDelete