A Worldly Country Poem by John Ashbery

A Worldly Country

Rating: 4.8


Not the smoothness, not the insane clocks on the square,
the scent of manure in the municipal parterre,
not the fabrics, the sullen mockery of Tweety Bird,
not the fresh troops that needed freshening up. If it occurred
in real time, it was OK, and if it was time in a novel
that was OK too. From palace and hovel
the great parade flooded avenue and byway
and turnip fields became just another highway.
Leftover bonbons were thrown to the chickens
and geese, who squawked like the very dickens.
There was no peace in the bathroom, none in the china closet
or the banks, where no one came to make a deposit.
In short all hell broke loose that wide afternoon.
By evening all was calm again. A crescent moon
hung in the sky like a parrot on its perch.
Departing guests smiled and called, 'See you in church!'
For night, as usual, knew what it was doing,
providing sleep to offset the great ungluing
that tomorrow again would surely bring.
As I gazed at the quiet rubble, one thing
puzzled me: What had happened, and why?
One minute we were up to our necks in rebelliousness,
and the next, peace had subdued the ranks of hellishness.

So often it happens that the time we turn around in
soon becomes the shoal our pathetic skiff will run aground in.
And just as waves are anchored to the bottom of the sea
we must reach the shallows before God cuts us free.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Kumarmani Mahakul 27 June 2021

From palace and hovel, the great parade is noticed with great vision and perceptional manner. An excellent sharing is done. A nice poem of the day is chosen..

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Sylvia Frances Chan 27 June 2021

Congratulations as being chosen as The Modern Poem Of The Day!

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Sylvia Frances Chan 27 June 2021

Profound poem! Such an impressive write about his Worldly Country and in all stanzas so well best end rhymes. WOW! What a poetic art.patiently built up

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Sylvia Frances Chan 27 June 2021

Awards and honors 2011, National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters To my Favourites!

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Sylvia Frances Chan 27 June 2021

1) To read an Ashbery poem with the intent to explicate in the traditional sense is to make a daring, perhaps foolhardy, leap of semantic faith.5 Stars full for this explicit good poem!

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John Ashbery

John Ashbery

Rochester, New York
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