-
Gallery
Artist’s Quotation
You come to nature with all her theories, and she knocks them all flat. ~Renoir
-
Book Recommendations
Sign-up For RSS Feed
Tags
Rita Dove NEA Jennifer Maestre The Air That I Breathe One Simple Question Peter Callesen Bryce Alan Flurie Nick Brandt Mathew's House Project Bread and Tulips Americana Holbrook AZ Susan Springer Ottawa Science J Tillman Sharon Chmielarz Wendell Berry Biblical art A SONNET FOR NAPALM Daniel Hoffman WILLIAM AARNES Silent World Love Girl Ben Zion Poetry Out Loud Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens John F. Kennedy Pablo Neruda If It Be Your Will Portrait Reading Evaporation The Streets Animals Paperclay Dennis Sampson POW Michael Kenna James Deahl And As If The Rain Ocean Waves Wordle Music Pixie Foudre Bamian caves Peggy Noonan Walker Percy Creative Textures Ocean Chip Cain Lane Smith Naomi Shihab Nye Self Image Robert Hayden Dance Trinity Art Conference Webb Sisters Wire Sculpture Flickr Robert Burns onOne Square Halo Everyman Photo Contest Jess Lopez-King The Fat Man Ethics in Photography Silent Music Kumi Yamashita Vladimir Tatlin Vespers Interview I Shall Be Released Holocaust National Geographic Photo Contest Sunsets Family Birthday Green Living Mark Doty Japanese Artist In Camera Robert Frost Trinity Arts Conference Animated Short New Water Count To Ten William Blake Alela Diane Michael Nichols OTR Kevin Young Color Robert Haas Van Gogh Nancy Henry MOMA Word Art John Donne John Keats Find Work Glass art William Stafford Floyd Skloot Rhina P. Espaillat Paper Cutting Oscars Cristians In The Visual Arts Hiram Larew Typolution White Winter Hymnal Brooklyn They Sit Together on the Porch Western Sunsets Alistair Heseltine Arthur and Yu Dylan Covers Bob Dylan Ox Cart Man Lightroom 3 Flirtation Backwards Arizona Sunsets Netflix Otherwise Angela Shaw Black and White Terry Evans Kathleen Adcock Mixed Media Pane e tulipani Old Time Radio Hearts and Minds 1 Question Kindly Perfecr Suite 6 50 People Love In Black And White Cowboy Junkies Christian Rock Leonard Cohen Harriet Tubman basketry Cara Barer Poet Laureate Legos Shadow art Piano John Bisbee Macmillan The search B&W White As Diamonds London Alicia Keys Larry Norman PBS Troy DeArmitt Cisco Kid Ted Kooser WineKIng Galleries Samuel Bak Angela Mellor Art Conference Monet The List Jewish The Lone Ranger Emily Dickinson Nathan Sawaya Animated Poetry Scotland memories Tina Dico Degas Math Scholastics books Rilke Roger Mitchell Foreign Films Movie Mary Louise Parker Snow Jack Smart Film Seagull.To Win Ed Knippers Hardly Art Text Art Kelli Russell Agodon The Shirt Katja Mater Sky King weaving Katrina Poverty John Leax Philip Larkin paper sculpture Donald Hall Makato Fujimura Nature New York National Poetry Month Train Station Fleet Foxes Wendy Cope musician Carl Sandburg New Yourk City Photocrati Billy Collins Children in a Field Denise Levertov At The End Of Paths Not Taken Theodore Roethke Sunset Rachel Zucker Poetry Marc Chagall Nail Art Player Piano Sigur Rós Art and Christianity New Video Psalm 34:8 Africa I See Random Art An Wine Olivier Beaudoin Video Facebook Environment William Doreski Prisoner of words Art Theft. Word Waiting Afghanistan Flower Body Image Georges Rouault Film Posters Art H. PALMER HALL Pause Boy Bonnie Ferrill Roman Camera Toss Jane Kenyon Louise Gluck Dillon Gallery Dale Chihuly Acadamy Awards Jon Pineda Earth Day Biscuit Olga's Gallery Short Film The Shadow Fractals Water Hyacinth Pencil Art Boy and Girl Ann Ginsburgh Hofkin Makoto Fujimura Alice N. Persons Black History Cezanne photography Mark Strand Bird sculpture Bianca Rossini Beach Calvin College Sunset Winds by Madeleine L'Engle
Tag Archives: Philip Larkin
Yet still the unresting castles thresh
The Trees
The trees are coming into leaf
Like something almost being said;
The recent buds relax and spread,
Their greenness is a kind of grief.
Is it that they are born again
And we grow old? No, they die too.
Their yearly trick of looking new
Is written down in rings of grain.
Yet still the unresting castles thresh
In fullgrown thickness every May.
Last year is dead, they seem to say,
Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.
Posted in creative, Literature, National Poetry Month 2008, Poetry, Writing
Comments Off

Recent Comments