PERREAULT Magazine JUNE | JULY | Page 26

Perreault Magazine - 26 -

“PLACE”

On the last day of the world

I would want to plant a tree

what for

not for the fruit

the tree that bears the fruit

is not the one that was planted

I want the tree that stands

in the earth for the first time

with the sun already

going down

and the water

touching its roots

in the earth full of the dead

and the clouds passing

one by one

over its leaves

(Reprinted by permission)

BP:Buddhism’s influence

You have been a student of Buddhism for many, many years and still spend time in meditation every day. Planting palm trees, writing poetry, tending a garden are meditation in action. How has your practice informed your life?

WM: Practice is attention to one’s own mind, and necessarily informs every aspect of my life.

BP: Ecological issues

Elizabeth Kolbert writes of the ‘Sixth Extinction’. Your poem ‘For a Coming Extinction’ was written in 1967. Do you still grow seeds and plant a tree? Is another poem forthcoming?

WM: I no longer cultivate seeds, due to my poor eyesight. I do still plant a few trees. I have never known when or if there would be another poem. They come from the unknown.

BP:Technology

In our era of technological dependence and obsession, do you still write with a pen?

WM: Yes.

BP:The future of the Conservancy

How will the Merwin Conservancy create a space for young poets and artists in which they can pursue their creative visions?

WM: We are working out connections with the community, with a series of poets, writers and naturalists who come and give talks and readings.

BP:PERREAULT Magazine

What would you like to tell our readers to inspire them to ‘get involved’?

Would you like to tell them with a poem?

WM: I would love it if The Merwin Conservancy led visitors to think, “I could do something like this,” and they began by planting a tree. I hope that all my poems encourage people to feel an intimate relation with every other form of life.

Mr. Merwin on Poetry and environmental activism

POEMS

by W.S. Merwin