a funny thing happened on the way to decorum

Happy you! Today you get three poems about rain - because it’s been suitably April-showersy here in London town.

Don Paterson’s Rain, from his collection by the same name.

John Keats’ Fancy, full of personified nouns and seasons.

Sylvia Plath’s Black Book in Rainy Weather.

(I love this bit: With luck, / Trekking stubborn through this season / Of fatigue, I shall /Patch together a content /Of sorts.)

And finally, the full text of Rabindranath Tagore’s Rainy Day, in translation:

Sullen clouds are gathering fast over the black fringe of the
forest.
O child, do not go out!
The palm trees in a row by the lake are smiting their heads
against the dismal sky; the crows with their dragged wings are
silent on the tamarind branches, and the eastern bank of the river
is haunted by a deepening gloom.
Our cow is lowing loud, ties at the fence.
O child, wait here till I bring her into the stall.
Men have crowded into the flooded field to catch the fishes
as they escape from the overflowing ponds; the rain-water is
running in rills through the narrow lanes like a laughing boy who
has run away from his mother to tease her.
Listen, someone is shouting for the boatman at the ford.
O child, the daylight is dim, and the crossing at the ferry
is closed.
The sky seems to ride fast upon the madly rushing rain; the
water in the river is loud and impatient; women have hastened home
early from the Ganges with their filled pitchers.
The evening lamps must be made ready.
O child, do not go out!
The road to the market is desolate, the lane to the river is
slippery. The wind is roaring and struggling among the bamboo
branches like a wild beast tangled in a net.
Apr 19
PADA # 17,18, and 19 

This nugget of gold is an epigraph in W D Davies’ ‘The Gospel and the Land’ which I am reading at this very moment in the British Library.  It is taken from Amos N. Wilder’s Grace Confounding.


…He came where he wasn’t expected

as He always does,
though a few mages were tipped off.
He came where even the Apostles couldn’t go along,
in Nazareth of all places, on the edge of nowhere;
they had to place it in David’s home town.
He is always one step ahead of us;
the space-age calls for new maps
and its altars and holy places are not yet marked.
__
Really, though: how often do you get theology, biblical criticism, science fiction, and topography presented in no more than 9 lines of poem? 
Apr 20
PADA #20 - Amos Wilder