Hello PoetryVoting

Vote

Voting-Boards

Home

HomeFollowingInboxNotifications

Read

ReadLiftedFeedsHeartedHistoryMy poemsNew poem

Explore

ExploreOrbitsWordsTagsClassics
Log in
0
Stars
0
Embers
0
Alerts
0
Inbox

Vote

Voting-Boards

Home

HomeFollowingInboxNotifications

Read

ReadLiftedFeedsHeartedHistoryMy poemsNew poem

Explore

ExploreOrbitsWordsTagsClassics
Log in
0
Stars
0
Embers
0
Alerts
0
Inbox

Blue - 18th June 1994

I've never had trouble with blue;

Not the kind of trouble you'ld imagine, anyway.

Blue isn't sticky or hot,

It isn't painful, doesn't get in your way.

It might feel a bit weighty sometimes,

But no more than that.

I suppose if I was a criminal I'd be afraid of blue -

A big criminal, that is,

But being only a very small criminal, and friendly at that,

I find the blue a pretty friendly place.

And if ever I have to do an honest day's work,

Which isn't too often,

Then I find the blue

Is a good place to go afterwards to recover.

You might think that blue is difficult

To get hold of, difficult to see;

But I've never found that.

When I was very small, everything was blue,

Especially other people's eyes.

Where I lived as a boy,

The hills in springtime were covered with blue:

Millions of blue bells

Clothing the hills in glorious raiment,

Filling the woods with paeans of joy.

When I was six my mother took me

Over the hills surrounding our valley,

And suddenly, there, way down over the other side,

Very far below and a long way away,

Was the steel blue sea, vast, enormous, curved, beyond measure,

Echoing the enormity of the pale blue sky above.

There wasn't any lack

Of dark blue either in my childhood:

The night sky was pretty dark blue even though

There were a million stars.

I had no grey hairs when I discovered that blue

Lay in a kind of haze around grave stones;

It descended particularly thickly, like a kind of fog,

When my grandfather died.

Of course I assumed he'd just drifted off in it.

How I wanted to fly off into the blue myself;

But my body being much too heavy

I had to wait for dream-time,

And then there was no holding me back;

I was off into the blue like a shot.

At school, I met blue in the physics lab:

There were big fat blue sparks,

And incredible blues singing out of the spectroscope.

And when I looked through a telescope

There seemed to be an awful lot of dark blue

Between me and the moon,

Which is where I wanted to go.

We had a swimming pool at boarding school

And the water and the bottom and sides of that were blue.

I never had any problems diving into that blue pool,

Even into the end where the blue bottom

Seemed a long rippling way down.

When I got a bit older and began to notice girls,

Things got even bluer.

Especially when girls were around

But even the blue absence of girls was absorbing.

I soon found that all singers sing in blue,

And it all seemed too true.

Blue was the way things were,

The way things had to be.

What wasn't blue wasn't true.

The blue vanished for a while

When my first love showed up,

But I felt so strange without blue

That I brought her a big blue sapphire

Which dangled snugly where I had intended,

Reminding me and her

Where Truth sometimes lay

But not for long.

And when I first spent the night with a girl

I got yet another angle on blue.

When I got married, blue seemed to recede for a bit,

But after a while, blue came looking for me,

As if to say "Where have you been?"

Then I began to look at paintings,

And I noticed a lot of blue in them,

Especially in the Trés Riche Heures

Of the Duc de Berry.

The blue of those paintings

Seemed to be saying something -

Singing of freedom and joy;

This was a blue different

From the blue I'd been used to.

The blue I'd been used to was kind of blue blue;

It started somewhere in your guts

And shone right through you

And everything else, every other colour

Was kind of on top of that -

Less than blue, coming out of blue, returning to blue.

I painted in blue too.

I painted blue mountains, rank on rank,

Growing fainter and fainter into the distance

Until they disappeared into the distant blue sky

Out of which they materialized again.

It seemed to me perfectly obvious

That blue was the basic colour

Especially when one day I went up Mont Blanc

And saw that even rocks and ice and snow were blue.

One day, assisted by metal wings,

I took to the sky;

How wonderful to float in it -

To float in a vastness of pure blue

So vast that it dwarfed the broad earth;

So vast that it outstretched even the mountainous clouds

And the foam flecked blue-green sea.

I went to New Zealand to see

If the blue at the bottom of the world

Was the same as the blue at the top.

It was just the same,

But when they told me there

That I had a blue aura

I began to suspect

That I couldn't be objective about blue.

In any case, the Antipodean lasses

Made me feel as blue as I had ever felt.

Is blue really real, I thought to myself one day

As I ate a bowl full of Psilocybe mushrooms.

Half an hour later my eyes were fixed

On the blue door

And I knew it to be the doorway to Paradise.

I walked through it

And the sky outside was huge, grey-blue,

Crowded with dark blue elephants of heaven.

And standing proudly in the midst of space

Was the perfect arc of a rainbow,

And I knew that my old friend Akshobhya

Was not far away.

Even the car that we drove in was blue -

A rich, dark, velvety blue.

Years later I was in the Orient;

There the sky is a blue

Difficult to imagine

Until you have seen it.

On the island of Ceylon the blue is so blue

It seems to press down on and penetrate everything -

It's irresistible, adamantine blue.

But of course it's subtle too, that Ceylonese blue.

Sometimes it's pale, so pale that you wonder

Whether it's blue at all,

Or whether it's your own mind you're seeing.

But more often it's that rich, luminous, velvety blue

That baffles the eye and baffles the brain:

Where is the blue?

Is it near or far, inside or outside?

Now, in middle age, I have no real difficulty with blue.

My blue has become deeper and more pervasive.

It has filled my head, my lungs and my heart.

Turning towards a picture of the Buddha,

I feel the blue in and around me

Is continuous with the blue in and around Him.

Request permission to use this poem
Written by
ashvajit
Welsh
Published
Mar 26, 2012
Lines·Words
154·1.1k
Permission

Request to use this poem

Tell ashvajit how you would like to use it. We review requests before forwarding them.

AboutBlogFAQPrivacyTermsContact
© 2009-2026 Hello Poetry/v27.0 by @eliotyork
Explore
Hello PoetryVoting
Write