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Herb Brin, World Recognized Poet n addition to volume after volume of content for the Heritage newspapers, from community details to hard-hitting exposes, Herb Brin built a world-wide following for his brash, passionate style of poetry, expressed in six slim volumes."Your Rubio poems reverberate in the soul. How a journalist, how an editor could also be a brilliant poet is a source of astonishment - and of gratitude." -- Elie Wiesel "Herb, your poetry soars and touches one's soul. It is a joy to have your wonderful books grace my personal library…" -- Rabbi Alexander Schindler "I am especially struck - among the many fine Herb Brin poems - by "In Lamentation," especially its powerful last quatrain with its alembic of time and eternity and I feel deeply honored that you send these poems, inscribed to me." -- Kevin Starr, California State Librarian "Poems from the Rubio is an exquisite masterpiece. Rubio is vivid and powerful. It has a beauty of spirit that is deeply moving..." -- Steven B. Sample, President, Univ. of Southern California "Wild Flowers, Justice, Justice and Conflicts infused the anemic state of modern American poetry with a new and passionate voice that celebrated the tragedies and triumphs of its people with burning indignation and ecstatic joy." -- Tom Tugend Six of Herb Brin's poems follow:
Song for OdetteThere was the time in occupied France when a powerful nation hunted down Jewish children. One was Odette....
I cup my hands I blow dandelions to the wind Oh, a tender-touching wind That fans the face Like wisps of eyelid upon the cheek A butterfly kiss.
And away, away they fly Puffs of dandelion to the sky High To the sun And try as I sigh to shade The eye My vision blurs.
Odette For you this happy song Of sunshine and dandelion And a fleckless sky And Alpine waters tracing Rivulets To a child's Riviera of dream.
I must not tell I must not tell To take the magic From this happy song And blur my eyes with fires Of memory.
For eyes burn And tears reveal a hunted child Oh, hunted, hunted, hunted Child.
Where to hide the night Where to hide the day Where to hide the end of false papers And false names And real hungers And imagined beauties?
Are there not beauties In the fields of France Even the German France?
Find a magic meadow There must be one I have it on faith there must be one And gather dandelions In your cupped hands And if the wind forsakes Blow them with your breath And they will fly away And they will fly away
Gossamer to the innocence Of sky High, to the sun.
Sing, Odette Sing, Odette And run!
Jan. 1, 1981 Los Angeles from Justice, Justice |
I Invented Time
Hold back your clocks Damn it, no requiem for me! I'll rust those gears With the fire spray of seas That sweep my autumn years.
Crusts of age clog my knees But I'll get along At a lesser pace At a lesser pace.
And softer my sighs Gentler, more gentle And as suns descend I'll get along It's moonlight saving time For me.
I've many a mountain yet to climb And the hot breath of lips on mine And the touch of tender hips.
Are there promises to keep? Don't count my ways Don't count my ways.
The brook, the stream, the massive sea Hold many mysteries for me And books unread And paths untrod Primeval forests beckon me.
Don't speed my way to dreams undreamed I've cantatas to create I've heady lilacs yet to sense And little foxes to divine.
Take back your clocks Hold back your clocks With searing breath of lips On mine I invented time.
April 28, 1982 London From: My Spanish Years |
Unter den Linden
I saw a changing of the guard Unter den Linden Tall men, bearing guns, presenting arms Nordic men About face, stiff, deliberate Automatons, raising legs Goosestep Unter den Linden Again.
It seems I saw a multitude Unter den Linden A master race, men, women Screaming, chanting, beaming euphoria Tomorrow will be theirs And the tomorrows of tomorrow.
The Yellow Star upon the breast It seemed it was again Unter den Linden Beside die Komische Oper And Mack the Knife Cavorting for Jenny And the black freighter going out to sea And aboard her Was me In an idiot's delight.
I saw Anne Frank Unter den Linden In a museum for German history And I alone to contemplate the bronze For who is there to care Unter den Linden Where legs goosestep their terror Through my heart Beneath the Yellow Stars.
Humboldt University sits astride Under the Lindens The same von Humboldt of my childhood pard Chicago Where I dreamed idyllic dreams And attended Talmud Torah Beside von Humboldt School Where Jewish childhood danced. But never mind.
They offer restitution To make it good again. German marks for breathless gas And ovens bearing symbols of Mercedes Babies rising to the skies on vapored wings.
Restitution? Give me back my children From that black freighter But speak softly now To me, Unter den Linden.
May 30, 1986 Berlin |
Atop the Rubio
Gone are the songbirds And the song from my trees On the mountain atop the Rubio.
The pines are shedding needles In disarray, forming blankets of thorn To warm the roots, Impending storms are chilling As the life cycles have it.
I am left with crickets in the night The unrelenting sound of endless, melancholy rasps From all the shadows of the night With only a sliver moon to comfort me In the awesomeness of darks on darks And a cacophony of sound Portending the arrival of autumn's winds In the stark lonesomeness of gusts Whispering through the brush.
Soon the rains will come And life exists in burrows on the mountain While in my tiny home Nestling on the Rubio I kindle logs to warm the hearth And abuse the chill Of the new season's wintry will.
No longer is the eternal test: When winter comes for me, How far is spring?
The control of life cycles Has not been given me nor thee If winter comes When winter comes.
On the Rubio are no forevers But on the mountain, too, there will be spring And the beautiful deer, the gentle deer Will race the butterflies For the wildflowers and the berries Dancing colors against a cloudless sky.
And the songbirds will return To enchant the shadows And if I am there -- oh, if I am there I will sing with them, again And sigh.
Oct. 7, 1991 From: On the Rubio |
A Song of Magic
A child with a tear Sheds a torment for me His grief tears the heavens apart
Oh I'd bring him a song To soften his wrong And a trick And a trick for a start
For the trace of a smile I'd tumble a mile I'd tangle the trees For a child
And weave for him tales Of high-flying whales Of princes Of kingdoms beguiled
Oh I'd sing him of places Where monkeys make faces At rhinos that frolic on air And I'd pop a balloon For my friend the baboon And I'd dance with a laughing bear
A sob and a fear Would soon disappear And he'd laugh At a tipsy giraffe
Or a turtle that sings Of wondrous things Or a lion on butterfly wings
Oh child of my heart Oh child of my heart Griefs tears the heavens apart.
Dec. 7 1965 In flight to L.A. From Justice, Justice |
Who is Wise?
Who is wise and who is honored? He who takes a gentle bride She who shares his towering dreams They are wise and the are honored.
Who is wise and who is honored? He who treasures tenderness She whose eyes are jeweled stars They are wise and they are honored.
Who is wise and who is honored? My won, my son's idyllic vision His bride, his bride above all rubies They are wise and they are honored.
Who is wise and who is honored? He who dreams of fatherhood She who sighs for motherhood They are wise and they are honored.
Theirs is love among the honored Theirs is love beyond the far stars Send them warm and gentle winds For they are wise and I am honored.
March 21, 1991 From: On the Rubio |
Copies of these books are currently available in limited supply. To enquire about ordering copies… or to send any sort of message to/about Herb Brin, please write to djbrin@pop.earthlink.net. |