painting by Markus PernhartA Poem for the 150th Anniversary of Robert Frost’s Birth: ‘Imagine Mountains’ by Carey Jobe The Society March 26, 2024 Beauty, Culture, Poetry 22 Comments . Imagine Mountains For the Sesquicentennial of Robert Frost’s birth (March 26, 1874 – March 26, 2024) “Let chaos storm! Let cloud shapes swarm! I wait for form.” —Robert Frost, “Pertinax” Imagine a mountain’s patient peaks revert to wave-rinsed shoals of sand, that limestone’s undulating streaks or slate stairs crumbling on cliffsides deposit damply in your hand a drifting crinoid’s feathered strand still smelling of Silurian tides. Then, like a plate, the seashore cracks. You vanish, and your sandy tracks subsume in metamorphic birth as an irrupting spine of earth rumples bright sea, tarp-taut terrain, like bargain carpets tossed in drifts; tectonic shields collide and strain like thudding wrestlers; throated rifts widen; red magma rivers slide in dragon-coils; cake-layered bedrock uprears, then the tsunami tide halts mid-air to abruptly lock in crustal, chill, mesmeric glaze a lofty mountain’s quiet gaze. Five fingers then mold stone like clay: one finger is the knifing stream that rinses bone-gray silts away, filtering to a pebbled gleam through leaf-weirs fine as tangled hair; another, summer storms that tear rock-clinging trees with banshee yowl, upturning roots with crash of wood, a gaping crater where they stood; or winter’s milky fog that soaks the cliff’s brow like a soggy towel, freezing by starlight to ice-wedge loose boulders off a giddy ledge that bounce downslope like hammer strokes; or tendril threads that stitch and wind a garment woven underground along, between, against, around whatever cracks or clefts they find, grubbing like moles through earthen belts; or when in March a snowbank melts— first steam, then trickles, then a flood. Avalanche-quick, whole hillsides go in batter-thick, congealing mud while buried streams, stalactite-slow, trace hidden caves—then sinkholes slump where rain stews in a boiler sump black kettles of nutritious ink that hickory, white oak, poplar drink, a heady bubbling leafy brew that cures the vapors—rousing, you observe green pastureland where soon farmhouses rise and cattle graze, traversing lives of little change from daybreak sun to midnight moon under a mountain’s quiet gaze. Imagine a patient mountain range. Beclouded by a churning might that shapes our coarsened breadth and height avalanche-quick, stalactite-slow, eyes search too vaguely to perceive the truths we feel but cannot know. Mountains teach us to believe. . Crinoids: passive suspension feeders who filter plankton from sea water through feathery arms and are documented in the fossil record as early as 480 million years ago. The Silurian Era (443.7 to 416 million years ago): a period during which Earth underwent widespread geologic changes that had considerable impact on the environment and life. . . Carey Jobe is a retired attorney. In addition to the Society of Classical Poets, his poems have recently appeared in Blue Unicorn, The Orchards Poetry Journal, The Road Not Taken, and The Chained Muse. He lives and writes near Tallahassee, Florida. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. Trending now: 22 Responses Michael Pietrack March 26, 2024 I thought the last stanza was especially strong. avalanche-quick, stalactite-slow, And Mountains teach us to believe. Were my favorite lines. Well done! Reply Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 Thanks, Michael! Reply Joseph S. Salemi March 26, 2024 This an imaginative array of description and narrative, taking the reader through a kaleidoscopic range of geological changes and transformations and shifts. It captures a real sense of the vast age of the earth, and the countless millions of years that have both shaped and then destroyed whole mountain ranges, and then brought them back in intricate new ways and patterns. The rhythmic movement of the verse suggests a ritual drumbeat, almost as if a shaman were speaking in one long drone of soothsaying. And yet this is a normal tetrameter meter, with just few bumps here and there. The narrative voice of the poem is one of invitation — asking the reader to picture, fantasize, and imagine. The length of the poem makes it very much like a catalogue-piece, which provides the reader with a complex list of things to ponder. It is very good work, and highly sophisticated. Reply Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 Joe, I always appreciate your insightful remarks. The iambic tetrameter and stanzaless rhyme scheme are loosely drawn from “A Missive Missile,” a lesser known but great Frost poem. Frost’s whole life was an effort to derive form and meaning from the chaos of experience. Hence the mountain metaphor. Thanks for commenting! Reply Mary Gardner March 26, 2024 In this poem you have guided me through millions of years, all the while capturing geologic motion with your perfect verbs. Reply Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 Thanks, Mary! Reply Roy Eugene Peterson March 26, 2024 There is so much articulated and detailed information in this poem requiring concentration that rewards us with a beautiful symphony for the senses. Dr. Salemi said it well in his comments, “highly sophisticated.” Reply Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 Thanks, Roy! Glad you liked it. Reply jd March 26, 2024 Beautiful words, alive and begging to be heard. Thank you. Reply Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 Thanks, jd! Reply Paul A. Freeman March 26, 2024 Loved the imagery – the hammer strokes, the thudding wrestlers. I’m reminded by your poem of the Rod Taylor version of ‘The Time Machine’, where the geology changes around him as he travels back and forth in time A pleasure to read, Carey. Reply Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 I’m really glad you liked it, Paul. Thanks for commenting! Reply Patricia Jobe March 26, 2024 Carey after reading your poem, my year of Geology was remembered. Good job with your theme! Patricia J Reply Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 Thanks for commenting, PJ! Reply C.B. Anderson March 27, 2024 The tropes and imagses tumble down the sturdy ladder of fluid rhyme like a rockslide. The “frosty” heave of geological time and evolution are conveyed powerfully, almost viscerally. I could easily imagine that the mountain was part of the cliff above Dover Beach. R.F. should be pleased. Reply Carey Jobe March 27, 2024 I’m grateful for your kind remarks, C.B., especially that R.F. would be pleased. I hope so! Reply Susan Jarvis Bryant March 27, 2024 “Imagine Mountains” presented this reader with an avalanche of stunning imagery that has overwhelmed my senses and left me breathless… I’m going back for another read… only this time… I’ll take it slowly… and savor every linguistic delight. Thank you, Carey, for this head-turning poetic nod to Robert Frost. Reply Carey Jobe March 27, 2024 Susan, I’m delighted you liked the poem. Like you (and like Frost), I try to fill each line with intriguing ideas expressed with the best possible words. The English language is filled with riches, as shown in the many fine poems you’ve penned. Thanks for your encouraging comments! Reply Adam Sedia March 30, 2024 I’m thrilled to see you commemorate this important anniversary, especially with such a well-crafted and ambitious work. What I like best about it is how it stands on its own — the association with Frost is entirely implied, except for the subtitle. The language is lushly descriptive and filled with action (unexpectedly, given you are describing fossils and mountains). And at the end you show us how the poem commemorates Frost. I read there an allusion to his principle that “a poem begins in delight and ends in wisdom.” Thank you. Reply Carey Jobe March 30, 2024 Adam, I’m grateful for your insightful observations about my poem. Especially so, as you are a discerning Frost scholar as shown by recent articles you wrote about his poetry and life. Many thanks! Reply David Bellemare Gosselin April 15, 2024 “eyes search too vaguely to perceive the truths we feel but cannot know. Mountains teach us to believe.” Great finisher. Bravo! Reply Carey Jobe April 15, 2024 Your comment means a lot. Thanks, David! Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Michael Pietrack March 26, 2024 I thought the last stanza was especially strong. avalanche-quick, stalactite-slow, And Mountains teach us to believe. Were my favorite lines. Well done! Reply
Joseph S. Salemi March 26, 2024 This an imaginative array of description and narrative, taking the reader through a kaleidoscopic range of geological changes and transformations and shifts. It captures a real sense of the vast age of the earth, and the countless millions of years that have both shaped and then destroyed whole mountain ranges, and then brought them back in intricate new ways and patterns. The rhythmic movement of the verse suggests a ritual drumbeat, almost as if a shaman were speaking in one long drone of soothsaying. And yet this is a normal tetrameter meter, with just few bumps here and there. The narrative voice of the poem is one of invitation — asking the reader to picture, fantasize, and imagine. The length of the poem makes it very much like a catalogue-piece, which provides the reader with a complex list of things to ponder. It is very good work, and highly sophisticated. Reply
Carey Jobe March 26, 2024 Joe, I always appreciate your insightful remarks. The iambic tetrameter and stanzaless rhyme scheme are loosely drawn from “A Missive Missile,” a lesser known but great Frost poem. Frost’s whole life was an effort to derive form and meaning from the chaos of experience. Hence the mountain metaphor. Thanks for commenting! Reply
Mary Gardner March 26, 2024 In this poem you have guided me through millions of years, all the while capturing geologic motion with your perfect verbs. Reply
Roy Eugene Peterson March 26, 2024 There is so much articulated and detailed information in this poem requiring concentration that rewards us with a beautiful symphony for the senses. Dr. Salemi said it well in his comments, “highly sophisticated.” Reply
Paul A. Freeman March 26, 2024 Loved the imagery – the hammer strokes, the thudding wrestlers. I’m reminded by your poem of the Rod Taylor version of ‘The Time Machine’, where the geology changes around him as he travels back and forth in time A pleasure to read, Carey. Reply
Patricia Jobe March 26, 2024 Carey after reading your poem, my year of Geology was remembered. Good job with your theme! Patricia J Reply
C.B. Anderson March 27, 2024 The tropes and imagses tumble down the sturdy ladder of fluid rhyme like a rockslide. The “frosty” heave of geological time and evolution are conveyed powerfully, almost viscerally. I could easily imagine that the mountain was part of the cliff above Dover Beach. R.F. should be pleased. Reply
Carey Jobe March 27, 2024 I’m grateful for your kind remarks, C.B., especially that R.F. would be pleased. I hope so! Reply
Susan Jarvis Bryant March 27, 2024 “Imagine Mountains” presented this reader with an avalanche of stunning imagery that has overwhelmed my senses and left me breathless… I’m going back for another read… only this time… I’ll take it slowly… and savor every linguistic delight. Thank you, Carey, for this head-turning poetic nod to Robert Frost. Reply
Carey Jobe March 27, 2024 Susan, I’m delighted you liked the poem. Like you (and like Frost), I try to fill each line with intriguing ideas expressed with the best possible words. The English language is filled with riches, as shown in the many fine poems you’ve penned. Thanks for your encouraging comments! Reply
Adam Sedia March 30, 2024 I’m thrilled to see you commemorate this important anniversary, especially with such a well-crafted and ambitious work. What I like best about it is how it stands on its own — the association with Frost is entirely implied, except for the subtitle. The language is lushly descriptive and filled with action (unexpectedly, given you are describing fossils and mountains). And at the end you show us how the poem commemorates Frost. I read there an allusion to his principle that “a poem begins in delight and ends in wisdom.” Thank you. Reply
Carey Jobe March 30, 2024 Adam, I’m grateful for your insightful observations about my poem. Especially so, as you are a discerning Frost scholar as shown by recent articles you wrote about his poetry and life. Many thanks! Reply
David Bellemare Gosselin April 15, 2024 “eyes search too vaguely to perceive the truths we feel but cannot know. Mountains teach us to believe.” Great finisher. Bravo! Reply