Ukraine Conflict Inspires Canadian Poetry Volume

Poetry

Ukraine Conflict Inspires Canadian Poetry Volume

Susan McCaslin, Langley, B.C.

Volume 37  Issue 4, 5 & 6 | Posted: July 18, 2022

Mysteries abound in planet Earth, in the cosmos, in each of us.
Rocks, plants, animals, humans, starfields — interconnected.

Poetry at its best emanates from curiosity, wonder,
awe at our place in the order of things.

Words, musicality, form, rhythm, storytelling
are cairns raised to mountains in the poetic process.

In Ukraine, poems still spill from the wings of storks,
the mythopoetic pinions of dream horses

along with the whinnying of flesh and blood ones
transported in trucks away from the killing fields.

A poet’s medium weaves breath, fire, and crafted words —
a union of our Sophianic core with an otherness.

Poems even now are writing the poets,
leading them where they weren’t planning to go.

Poems are tricksters, liminal, lightening-quick
gold fires that don’t singe a hair.

Sometimes readers of poems follow golden threads
leading to hidden doorways

to energies they had no clue they had or needed,
places where thinking and feeling sing from a single sunflower.

When a poem is born, a line of invisibility
flows through the body-mind-heart-dance into pure presence.

Poetic interplay opens rivers of healing and regeneration
where silence and musicality bathe consciousness

and grief too has a high place of honour.

Poem excerpted from “Poems in Response to Peril – An Anthology in Support of Ukraine” edited by Penn Kemp and Richard-Yves Sitoski

The book is now available for distribution. Cost: $30 plus postage. To order, please contact Richard-Yves Sitoski at r_sitoski@yahoo.ca

Poets include: Yvonne Blomer, Marilyn Bowering, George Elliott Clarke, Daphne Marlatt, Robert Priest, Harold Rhenisch, Goran Simić, Sheri-D Wilson

A fund raiser for Ukraine.

   

Susan McCaslin, Langley, B.C.