NEW COLLECTED POEMS
   Wendell Berry
   NEW COLLECTED
   POEMS
   Wendell Berry
   Copyright © Wendell Berry 2012
   All rights reserved under International and
   Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
   Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
   ISBN: 978-1-6190-2047-4
   Cover design by Gerilyn Attebery
   Interior design by David Bullen
   COUNTER POINT
   1919 Fifth Street
   Berkeley, CA 94710
   www.counterpointpress.com
   Distributed by Publishers Group West
   10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
   TO TANYA, AS BEFORE
   Contents
   Preface: The Country of Déja Vu
   THE BROKEN GROUND (1964)
   Elegy
   Observance
   Boone
   Green and White
   A Man Walking and Singing
   The Companions
   The Aristocracy
   The Bird Killer
   An Architecture
   Canticle
   Sparrow
   A Music
   To Go By Singing
   The Wild
   May Song
   The Fear of Darkness
   The Plan
   The Guest
   The Thief
   The Broken Ground
   FINDINGS (1969)
   The Design of the House: Ideal and Hard Time
   The Handing Down
   Three Elegiac Poems
   OPENINGS (1968)
   The Thought of Something Else
   My Great-Grandfather’s Slaves
   October 10
   The Snake
   The Cold
   To My Children, Fearing for Them
   The Winter Rain
   March Snow
   April Woods: Morning
   The Finches
   The Porch over the River
   Before Dark
   The Dream
   The Sycamore
   The Meadow
   Against the War in Vietnam
   Dark with Power
   In Memory: Stuart Egnal
   The Want of Peace
   The Peace of Wild Things
   Grace
   To Think of the Life of a Man
   Marriage
   Do Not Be Ashamed
   Window Poems
   To a Siberian Woodsman
   A Discipline
   A Poem of Thanks
   Envoy
   FARMING: A HAND BOOK (1970)
   The Man Born to Farming
   The Stones
   The Supplanting
   Sowing
   The Familiar
   The Farmer Among the Tombs
   For the Rebuilding of a House
   The Springs
   Rain
   Sleep
   To Know the Dark
   Winter Night Poem for Mary
   Winter Nightfall
   February 2, 1968
   March 22, 1968
   The Morning’s News
   Enriching the Earth
   A Wet Time
   The Silence
   In This World
   The New Roof
   A Praise
   On the Hill Late at Night
   The Seeds
   The Wish to Be Generous
   Air and Fire
   The Lilies
   Independence Day
   A Standing Ground
   Song in a Year of Catastrophe
   The Current
   The Mad Farmer Revolution
   The Contrariness of the Mad Farmer
   The Farmer and the Sea
   Earth and Fire
   The Mad Farmer in the City
   The Birth (Near Port William)
   Awake at Night
   Prayers and Sayings of the Mad Farmer
   The Satisfactions of the Mad Farmer
   Meditation in the Spring Rain
   The Grandmother
   The Heron
   September 2, 1969
   The Farmer, Speaking of Monuments
   The Sorrel Filly
   To the Unseeable Animal
   THE COUNTRY OF MARRIAGE (1973)
   The Old Elm Tree by the River
   Poem
   Breaking
   The Country of Marriage
   Prayer after Eating
   Her First Calf
   Kentucky River Junction
   Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front
   A Marriage, an Elegy
   The Arrival
   A Song Sparrow Singing in the Fall
   The Mad Farmer Manifesto: The First Amendment
   Planting Trees
   The Wild Geese
   The Silence
   Anger Against Beasts
   At a Country Funeral
   The Recognition
   Planting Crocuses
   Praise
   The Gathering
   A Homecoming
   The Mad Farmer’s Love Song
   Testament
   The Clear Days
   Song
   Poem for J.
   The Long Hunter
   An Anniversary
   CLEARING (1977)
   History
   Where
   The Clearing
   Work Song
   From the Crest
   A PART (1980)
   Stay Home
   To Gary Snyder
   For the Hog Killing
   Goods
   The Adze
   The Cold Pane
   Falling Asleep
   A Purification
   A Dance
   The Fear of Love
   Seventeen Years
   To What Listens
   Woods
   The Lilies
   Forty Years
   A Meeting
   Another Descent
   Below
   The Star
   The Hidden Singer
   The Necessity of Faith
   To the Holy Spirit
   Ripening
   The Way of Pain
   We Who Prayed and Wept
   Grief
   Fall
   An Autumn Burning
   A Warning to My Readers
   Creation Myth
   The First
   Walking on the River Ice
   Throwing Away the Mail
   Except
   For the Future
   Traveling at Home
   July, 1773
   The Slip
   Horses
   THE WHEEL (1982)
   Requiem
   Elegy
   Rising
   Desolation
   The Strait
   The Law That Marries All Things
   Setting Out
   Song (1)
   From the Distance
   Letter
   Returning
   To Tanya at Christmas
   Song (2)
   The River Bridged and Forgot
   The Gift of Gravity
   Song (3)
   The Wheel
   The Dance
   Passing the Strait
   Our Children, Coming of Age
   Song (4)
   In Rain
   ENTRIES (1994)
   For the Explainers
   A Marriage Song
   Voices Late at Night
   The Record
   A Parting
   One of Us
   Thirty More Years
   The Wild Rose
   The Blue Robe
   The Venus of Botticelli
   In a Motel Parking Lot, Thinking of Dr. Williams
   To My Mother
   On a Theme of Chaucer
   The Reassurer
   Let Us Pledge
   The Vacation
 & 
					     					 			nbsp; A Lover’s Song
   Anglo-Saxon Protestant Heterosexual Men
   Air
   The Mad Farmer, Flying the Flag of Rough Branch, Secedes from the Union
   Duality
   The Three
   To Hayden Carruth
   Noguchi Fountain
   Spring
   Imagination
   For an Absence
   The Storm
   In Extremis: Poems about My Father
   Epitaph
   Come Forth
   GIVEN (2005)
   Dust
   In a Country Once Forested
   To Tanya on My Sixtieth Birthday
   They
   Cathedral
   Dante
   The Millennium
   June Wind
   Why
   The Rejected Husband
   The Inlet
   Listen!
   In Art Rowanberry’s Barn
   Burley Coulter’s Song for Kate Helen Branch
   How to Be a Poet (to remind myself)
   Words
   To a Writer of Reputation
   Seventy Years
   A Passing Thought
   The Leader
   The Ongoing Holy War Against Evil
   Some Further Words
   Lysimachia Nummularia
   LEAVINGS (2010)
   Like Snow
   On the Theory of the Big Bang as the Origin of the Universe
   Look It Over
   A Letter (to Ed McClanahan)
   A Letter (to my brother)
   A Letter (to Hayden Carruth)
   A Letter (to Ernest J. Gaines)
   Give It Time
   Questionnaire
   And I Beg Your Pardon
   David Jones
   Tu Fu
   A Speech to the Garden Club of America (With thanks to Wes Jackson and in memory of Sir Albert Howard and Stan Rowe)
   While Attending the Annual Convocation of Cause Theorists and BigBangists at the Local Provincial Research University, the Mad Farmer Intercedes from the Back Row
   Men Untrained to Comfort
   Over the Edge
   Index of Titles and First Lines
   The Country of Déjà Vu
   My old poems—I liked them all
   well enough when they were new.
   They came through the air, I wrote them down,
   and sent them on, as also I fed
   the birds who descended here to eat
   as they were passing through. Now
   I’m asked to read those poems again.
   What for? They all are from the Country
   of Déjà Vu, which is where
   I have no need to go back to.
   THE BROKEN GROUND
   (1964)
   For my mother and father
   ELEGY
   Pryor Thomas Berry
   March 4, 1864 – February 23, 1946
   I.
   All day our eyes could find no resting place.
   Over a flood of snow sight came back
   Empty to the mind. The sun
   In a shutter of clouds, light
   Staggered down the fall of snow.
   All circling surfaces of earth were white.
   No shape or shadow moved the flight
   Of winter birds. Snow held the earth its silence.
   We could pick no birdsong from the wind.
   At nightfall our father turned his eyes away.
   It was this storm of silence shook out his ghost.
   2.
   We sleep; he only wakes
   Who is unshapen in a night of snow.
   His shadow in the shadow of the earth
   Moves the dark to wholeness.
   We wait beside his body here, his image
   Shape of silence in the room.
   3.
   Sifting
   Down the wind, the winter rain
   Spirals about the town
   And the church hill’s jut of stones.
   Under the mounds, below
   The weather’s moving, the numb dead know
   No fitfulness of wind.
   On the road that in his knowledge ends
   We bear our father to the earth.
   We have adorned the shuck of him
   With flowers as for a bridal, burned
   Lamps about him, held death apart
   Until the grave should mound it whole.
   Behind us rain breaks the corners
   Of our father’s house, quickens
   On the downslope to noise.
   Our steps
   Clamor in his silence, who tracked
   The sun to autumn in the dust.
   Below the hill
   The river bears the rain away, that cut
   His fields their shape and stood them dry.
   Water wearing the earth
   Is the shape of the earth,
   The river flattening in its bends.
   Their mingling held
   Ponderable in his words—
   Knowledge polished on a stone.
   4.
   River and earth and sun and wind disjoint,
   Over his silence flow apart. His words
   Are sharp to memory as cold rain
   But are not ours.
   We stare dumb
   Upon the fulcrum dust, across which death
   Lifts up our love. There is no more to add
   To this perfection. We turn away
   Into the shadow of his death.
   Time in blossom and fruit and seed,
   Time in the dust huddles in his darkness.
   The world, spun in its shadow, holds all.
   Until the morning comes his death is ours.
   Until morning comes say of the blind bird:
   His feet are netted with darkness, or he flies
   His heart’s distance in the darkness of his eyes.
   A season’s sun will light him no tree green.
   5.
   Spring tangles shadow and light,
   Branches of trees
   Knit vision and wind.
   The shape of the wind is a tree
   Bending, spilling its birds.
   From the cloud to the stone
   The rain stands tall,
   Columned into his darkness.
   The church hill heals our father in.
   Our remembering moves from a different place.
   OBSERVANCE
   The god of the river leans
   against the shore in the early
   morning, resting from his caprices;
   the gentle sun parades
   on his runneled gaze—he devotes
   himself to watching it as one
   devotes oneself to sleep;
   the light becomes
   his consciousness, warming him.
   The river clears after the winter
   floods; the slopes of the hills renew
   the sun, diaphanous flower and leaf, blue-green
   with distance;
   this idle god dallies
   in his shade, his mind adorned with stones.
   At the river’s edge there is singing;
   the townsmen have come down from their sleep,
   their singing silences the birds;
   they sing renewal beyond irreparable
   divisions.
   The god did not expect
   these worshippers, but he hears
   them singing, briefly as reeds
   grown up by the water;
   they go
   away, the river re-enters
   their silence
   —and he watches
   a white towboat approach, shoving
   its rust-colored island of barges,
   the sound of its engines filling his mind
   and draining out;
   the forked wake
   wrinkles on his vision, pointing
   to the corner of his eye,
   and floats away;
   the holiday fishermen
   arrive—
   a man and his wife
   establish themselves on 
					     					 			 a sandbar, bringing
   lunch in a basket, blankets, tackle
   down the path through the young
   horseweeds;
   the woman smooths
   a blanket on the sand, and begins
   a ponderous sunbath, her eyes
   covered, her skirt hoisted
   above her knees;
   the man
   casts a baited line downstream
   and uncaps a beer:
   the god observes;
   these are the sundry
   objects of his thought.
   He has watched the passing
   of other boats, assemblages,
   seasons, inundations,
   boatmen
   whose voyages bore down the currents
   to the dark shores of their eyes
   —and has forgotten them, innocent
   of his seasonal wraths, his mischiefs
   accomplished and portending, as his present
   forbearance is innocent;
   the perfection
   of his forgetting allows the sun
   to glitter
   —the light
   flows away, its blue and white
   peeling off the green waves.
   His mind contains
   the river as its banks
   constrain it, in a single act
   receiving it and letting it go.
   BOONE
   Beyond this final house
   I’ll make no journeys, that is
   the nature of this place,
   I came here old; the house contains
   the shade of its walls,
   a fire in winter; I know
   from what direction to expect the wind;
   still
   I move in the descent
   of days from what was dreamed
   to what remains.
   In the stillness of this single place
   where I’m resigned to die
   I’m not free of journeys:
   one eye watches while the other sleeps
   —every day is a day’s remove
   from what I knew.
   We held a country in our minds
   which, unpossessed, allowed
   the encroachment of our dreams;
   our vision descended like doves
   at morning on valleys still blue
   in the extremity of hills
   until we moved in a prodigy of reckonings,
   sustaining in the toil of a journey
   the rarity of our desire.
   We came there at the end of spring,
   climbing out of the hill’s shadow
   in the evening,
   the light
   leaned quiet on the trees,
   we’d foreseen no words;
   after nightfall when the coals of our fire
   contained all that was left
   of vision, my journey relinquished me
   to sleep;
   kindling in the uneasy
   darkness where we
   broached our coming to the place we’d dreamed
   the dying green of those valleys