A Summer Garden Poem by Louise Gluck

A Summer Garden

Rating: 4.9


Several weeks ago I discovered a photograph of my mother
sitting in the sun, her face flushed as with achievement or triumph.
The sun was shining. The dogs
were sleeping at her feet where time was also sleeping,
calm and unmoving as in all photographs.

I wiped the dust from my mother's face.
Indeed, dust covered everything; it seemed to me the persistent
haze of nostalgia that protects all relics of childhood.
In the background, an assortment of park furniture, trees and shrubbery.

The sun moved lower in the sky, the shadows lengthened and darkened.
The more dust I removed, the more these shadows grew.
Summer arrived. The children
leaned over the rose border, their shadows
merging with the shadows of the roses.

A word came into my head, referring
to this shifting and changing, these erasures
that were now obvious—

it appeared, and as quickly vanished.
Was it blindness or darkness, peril, confusion?

Summer arrived, then autumn. The leaves turning,
the children bright spots in a mash of bronze and sienna.


2

When I had recovered somewhat from these events,
I replaced the photograph as I had found it
between the pages of an ancient paperback,
many parts of which had been
annotated in the margins, sometimes in words but more often
in spirited questions and exclamations
meaning "I agree" or "I'm unsure, puzzled—"

The ink was faded. Here and there I couldn't tell
what thoughts occurred to the reader
but through the bruise-like blotches I could sense
urgency, as though tears had fallen.

I held the book awhile.
It was Death in Venice (in translation):
I had noted the page in case, as Freud believed,
nothing is an accident.

Thus the little photograph
was buried again, as the past is buried in the future.
In the margin there were two words,
linked by an arrow: "sterility" and, down the page, "oblivion"—

"And it seemed to him the pale and lovely
summoner out there smiled at him and beckoned..."


3

How quiet the garden is;
no breeze ruffles the Cornelian cherry.
Summer has come.

How quiet it is
now that life has triumphed. The rough

pillars of the sycamores
support the immobile
shelves of the foliage,

the lawn beneath
lush, iridescent—

And in the middle of the sky,
the immodest god.

Things are, he says. They are, they do not change;
response does not change.

How hushed it is, the stage
as well as the audience; it seems
breathing is an intrusion.

He must be very close,
the grass is shadowless.

How quiet it is, how silent,
like an afternoon in Pompeii.


4

Beatrice took the children to the park in Cedarhurst.
The sun was shining. Airplanes
passed back and forth overhead, peaceful because the war was over.

It was the world of her imagination:
true and false were of no importance.

Freshly polished and glittering—
that was the world. Dust
had not yet erupted on the surface of things.

The planes passed back and forth, bound
for Rome and Paris—you couldn't get there
unless you flew over the park. Everything
must pass through, nothing can stop—

The children held hands, leaning
to smell the roses.
They were five and seven.

Infinite, infinite—that
was her perception of time.

She sat on a bench, somewhat hidden by oak trees.
Far away, fear approached and departed;
from the train station came the sound it made.

The sky was pink and orange, older because the day was over.

There was no wind. The summer day
cast oak-shaped shadows on the green grass.

Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Topic(s) of this poem: summer
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Mahtab Bangalee 03 November 2020

I held the book awhile. It was Death in Venice (in translation) : I had noted the page in case, as Freud believed, nothing is an accident. ....//// an excellent poem penned; by reading this it seems I am also on the summer garden; yeah; the Freud was right, I think so that " Nothing is an accident" . Every accident has history before its happening. For any irrational incident the accident comes out on own path; great poem penned; I enjoyed

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I just would say it happens very often to read a poem about the grass and trees in the country, (this is not permitted to everyone)) when you are sitting in your own garden just facing to the high moving trees. S.Freud has written a lot, but we cannot say that whe recall what he has said about reality. Here, Venice is the important point.

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A long magnificent poem indeed

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P A Noushad 08 October 2020

Dear Gluck, your verses touch me deeply, and I am lucky because a friend like you, pray for you.

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Sylvia Frances Chan 03 November 2020

Dear Great Poetess, CONGRATULATIONS being chosen by Poem Hunter as The Modern Poem Of The Day. WOW! What a delicious poem of nostalgy. I will be reading this lovely poem time and again. A true space to stroll along in this so endearing poem which I so admire. Thank you so much for sharing. God's Blessings in Abundance for you and your beloved family. A True Summer Garden at its Most Beautiful.5 Stars Full Vote.

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Khairul Ahsan 21 December 2020

A wondeful poem with an appropriate title. 'How hushed it is, the stage as well as the audience; it seems breathing is an intrusion' - how poetically described, truly of a Nobel laureate poet! " And it seemed to him the pale and lovely summoner out there smiled at him and beckoned..." - from where are these quoted lines taken? Heartiest congratulations on your poem’s selection as the ‘Modern Poem of the Day’!

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Mahtab Bangalee 20 December 2020

congrats for being selected again this great poem as POD after one and half months

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Dr Antony Theodore 20 December 2020

The sun moved lower in the sky, the shadows lengthened and darkened. The more dust I removed, the more these shadows grew. Summer arrived. indeed a great poem. to ny

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Ratnakar Mandlik 20 December 2020

A pleasant narration of summer and memoirs attached with it reminded by the photograph of poet's mother. A well deserved modern poem of the day.

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Edward Kofi Louis 20 December 2020

Childhood, Memories! ! Growing up; Facing the muse of summer. Thanks for sharing this poem with us.

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Louise Gluck

Louise Gluck

New York / United States
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