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Home Poetry Beauty

A Poem on Snowfall by Louis Groarke

July 5, 2023
in Beauty, Poetry
A A
12

.

Snowfall: Via Negativa

“Less is more.” —Literary Dictum

Out on the highway, snow settles in place
Covering the tracks the traffic has traced

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Blotting out edges, disguising the rough
Burying the world in heaps of white stuff

Obscuring the details of branches rimmed white
With down-drifting flakes that fill up the night

Immaculate, empty—winter forlorn
Clears out a space where beauty is born

So, poets, in language, clear out a space
In parsing out lines, they strive to erase

Removing distinctions too sharply defined
Cloaking in symbols what clutters the mind

Subtracting, not adding, more from the world
As a ribbon of metaphor slowly unfurls

Til the page, like landscape, briefly transfigured
Is buried in beauty, sweetly disfigured.

.

.

Louis Groarke is a professor in the Philosphy Department of St. Francis Xavier University, in Canada. He has published short stories and poems in various literary venues but is a philosopher by trade.  He recently published a book on literary criticism Uttering the Unutterable: Aristotle, Religion, and Literature (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2023).  In effect, it provides a traditional response to post-modernism.

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Comments 12

  1. Paddy Raghunathan says:
    2 years ago

    A sweet comparison.

    Keep writing!

    Paddy

    Reply
    • Louis Groarke says:
      2 years ago

      Thank you so much, Paddy; writing good poetry is hard but I will keep trying.

      Reply
  2. Roy Eugene Peterson says:
    2 years ago

    Louis, your poem on snowfall is a welcome reprieve from the heat dome that has been over Texas for two weeks. Those are great lines with memorable quotes in beautiful couplets! I really love this poem!

    Reply
    • Louis Groarke says:
      2 years ago

      Thanks Roy, as you point out, maybe writing poems about winter in the summer is another way to stay refreshed. I am in Canada… where is easy to write poems about the loveliness of snow! Best, Lg

      Reply
  3. Paul Freeman says:
    2 years ago

    Your imagery truly is a relief from the heat, Louis.

    I enjoyed the simplicity of the poem which fitted in with the theme and the use of couplets.

    I wasn’t sure in line 5 whether you meant ‘rimmed’ or ‘rimed’, but then I’m a fan of archaic words like ‘rime’ and ‘hoary’.

    Thanks for the read.

    Reply
    • Louis Groarke says:
      2 years ago

      Paul, That is a great suggestion. I thought that “rimmed” worked a bit better because it seems to me it is a longer sound and I had thought of branches holding onto a layer of snow. But “rimed” as in covered with frost could work nicely as well. Then the snow would be falling on top of the earlier frost and the ice-covered branches. So there is something to be said for that slight adjustment. Let me think about it. I too like archaic words and phrases–I think they can be used to great effect–they add a tone and a specific voice to a poem by placing it in a tradition. (A good thing, I think!) Thanks for the comments. Lg

      Reply
  4. Margaret Coats says:
    2 years ago

    “Cloaking in symbols what clutters the mind.” What a lovely description of the beautifying potential of poetry!

    And the illustration, with what appears to be a castle in the mist along with trees, is most appropriate.

    Reply
    • Louis Groarke says:
      2 years ago

      Yes, Margaret, They seem to be very good at pictures. I think the art and poetry connection is a winner. Both ways of somehow grappling with the aesthetic side of life. Thanks for the comment, Lg

      Reply
  5. Sally Cook says:
    2 years ago

    You understand the meaning of a symbol. I enjoyed this poem. Please show us more.

    Reply
    • Louis Groarke says:
      2 years ago

      Thank you, Sally. I have more poems–finished, half-finished, just begun, but like most of us, I write slowly. To get it just right can take several years. I appreciate the encouragement, Lg

      Reply
  6. Mary Sayler says:
    2 years ago

    I’m wondering if “Cloaking in symbols what clutters the mind” is what we do when our thoughts tumble – too many and too fast to search out the individual meanings when a poem wants to be written before we know what it’s trying to say or what we want to say.

    The irony of the ending made me smile.

    Reply
    • Louis Groarke says:
      2 years ago

      Mary, I like your way of putting it: “when a poem wants to be written.” Yes, it takes awhile to understand what we are trying to say; it is as if it is bigger than us and we have to be humble and the instrument so it can work its way through us. I wanted to propose poetry (and beauty) as a subtractive experience–somehow emptying out and (paradoxically) filling up with meaning. Snow does, in a sense, SWEETLY disfigure, i.e., readjust in a good way. So can poetry; that is the art of it. Thanks for the comment, Lg

      Reply

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