I adore this time of year, when the mask of winter has melted and spring shares its waxing light and banquet of colour. The canvas of the landscape seems to change each day as something new arises from the dark ground and something else fades and returns to the same moist earth. All in this temporal world is impermanent, transitioning from birth to death, moving in a life rhythm where cadence and pauses are as natural as the sun's daily sweep across the sky.
Perhaps it's spring's exuberance, its yawning and stretching into existence that adds to the quickening of this time of year.Where winter felt as the hours were frozen in solace, spring tugs us into the awakening light and seems to set the world on fast forward with an intensity that glimmers on rapture and holy rewards.
Is it any wonder that poets and their words seem to court this season like no other? Be it Shakespeare, Wordsworth, Lawrence, Lorca, or Oliver, the senses come alive with fertile imaginings and fitful bursts of muse inspired hope.
This poem by David Whyte speaks so keenly to the dawning of this season and of us all. Read it aloud and, even better, read it to another. Perhaps to the fading cherry blossoms pressing themselves against the clear blue sky.
THE SONG OF THE LARK
by David Whyte
The song
begins and the eyes are lifted
but the sickle points toward the ground,
its
downward curve forgotten in the song she hears,
while over the dark wood,
rising or falling,
the sun lifts on cool air, the small body of a singing lark.
The song falls, the eyes raise, the mouth opens
and her
bare feet on the earth have stopped.
Whoever listens in this silence, as she listens,
will also
stand opened, thoughtless, frightened
by the joy she feels, the pathway in the field
branching
to a hundred more, no one has explored.
What is
called in her rises from the ground
and is
found in her body,
what she is given is secret even from her.
This
silence is the seed in her
of
everything she is
and falling through her body
to the
ground from which she comes,
it finds a
hidden place to grow
and rises,
and flowers, in old wild places,
where the
dark-edged sickle cannot go.
from RIVER FLOW: New and Selected Poems
© David Whyte and Many Rivers PressJoin David Whyte at Royal Roads University for Crossing the Unknown Sea: Work as a Pilgrimage of Identity - an evening talk on Friday, May 2, and for Solace: The Art of Asking More Beautiful Questions on Saturday, May 3.
Wishing you a wild and wonder-filled spring.
Tess Wixted
Learning Associate
Visit us at cstudies.royalroads.ca.