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The SpringPoetry › topic 16

Helen Huth's poetry

topic 16 · 23 responses
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (19:14) seed
Helen Huth was a high school classmate of mine who died in a car crash on the bridge over the Mississippi River in Cape Girardeau Missouri. Her poetry silenced, I felt she had a promising future. I'm posting whatever bits and pieces and can muster up, mostly forwarded by Merle Busch, our science teacher at Bayless High, here. We'll also be building http://www.helenhuth.com I can't express how sad I have been at her loss over the years.
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (19:20) #1
Je - 63 A some what poem I. A somewhat fleshless Bird. in a somewhat fleshless cage of ribs, in a somewhat fleshless cage of cat, in a somewhat fleshless cage of world, has died. II. Somewhat a pity whatsome friends will do some say - "what provacation?" "Some hunger" - say I "He was somewhat wrong!" - some say Say I - "To hunger -?" "To love" some say . . . . . . . ("yes . . . . . " - say I) - "to love . . . then some what . . . . . . leave the cat .......that way!" hel.
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (19:24) #2
Don't touch me.... I am a rose A bloody, green rose I look at you, mouth open, and laugh! Where are your petals and your leaves???? don't touch me.... I hae thorns and I am a rose So you were formed of mud.....Black, inferior you are below me What you hate me????? Yes...But Don't touch me.... I am a rose
~Charlotte Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (19:33) #3
I feel the loss, and I never even knew her. Thanks for sharing these, Terry.
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (20:27) #4
In another topic here, Jane Hirshfield wrote: "Her poems? I will never know them, though they are the ones I most need."
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (20:32) #5
ESSE spinx-like sitting and watching thelittlepeoplerun Stole-faced NodDing oCaasionalLy avoiding the GLARE thatlittlepeopleoften STARE Oh you museum piece of a heart archaic-relic existence laughs at you a paper crown a purple rag and t i m e
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (20:34) #6
An ethereal love floats just beyond my reach. ever beyond my reach. My lonely heart longs and lunges for it's tenderness but it is just beyond my reach, ever beyond my reach. (Inspired by "Death Takes a Holiday")
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (20:49) #7
~stacey Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (21:49) #8
Thank you Paul. I understand much better now. I can see and feel the e.e. cummings inspiration and can hear the passion
~pmnh Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (22:25) #9
some of the most beautiful stuff i've read in a long while... really enjoyed this stuff... (and empathize with your loss... it never really gets better... they just sorta get further away, but it feels the same)...
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (22:35) #10
Dear Mr. Busch Miles and miles, of miles and miles of ageless, dust deep, lines of directions of many directionless, shadows of shells, of we who are for ever, thralls of we who are never. the motionless wind screams wae-sucks in the deaf ear as it races by to reach the distance of what it has passed, carrying the message, of prophecy, of the vent of forever, the horizon of endless of redness of mist of undefined departure heralds a disturbance, of always, of dust that rises and gathers and stagnates forever ahead of empty, searching, graying, infinitely hollow, sightless eyes, the shadow is drawn and stumbles, and follows as always seeking to reach what it has become, this, as all other, (existance?) of humanity evoked to a sameness of hope of fulfillment by the sign, climbs the ever present, withering barren propagator of all overshadowing, Iscariote tree, and lunges and peers, and hungers for, and hungers with, the wake of the swirling, clinging, dust ladden trale of the illusive wandering jew, of slef of the candy shop or the corner store, the leaves that fall and the men that snore, the birds that sing, and the man that thinks is
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (22:38) #11
The wild rose blushes quietly as the rain steals in and kisses it tenderly. The tiny crystalline drops shimmer in the innocent half-glow of dusk. Even now in the sudden, sulky shower the sun pears over the sloping curve of the earth to whisper 'Good eve' and then glide away to smoke up a grey-blue night.
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (22:40) #12
Butterfly Lithe and beautiful with silken stroke the fine web of a dream cools the air. Rise and descend, rise and descend with narcotic side affect The kingdom of color kaliedescopes in a lazy, hazy dream of golden summer and blue.
~terry Thu, Mar 19, 1998 (22:44) #13
I'm really praying that Merle can find the other 150 lost poems of Helen Huth that he gave to her sister before she died. That's the rest of the tragedy that befell the Huth family.
~Charlotte Fri, Mar 20, 1998 (01:25) #14
Terry, What was the year that Helen died?
~terry Fri, Mar 20, 1998 (07:19) #15
I believe it was '65, but I'll find out from Merle.
~terry Sat, Mar 21, 1998 (01:20) #16
CURIOSITY may have killed the cat; more likely the cat was just unlucky, or else curious to see what death was like, having no cause to go on licking paws, or fathering litter on litter of kittens, predictably. Nevertheless, to be curious is dangerous enough. To distrust what is always said, what seems, to ask odd questions, interfere in dreams, leave home, smell rats, have hunches does not endear him to those doggy circles where well-smelt baskets, suitable wives, good lunches are the order of things, and where prevails much wagging of incurious heads and tails. Face it. Curiosity will not cause him to die- only lack of it will. Never to want to see the other side of the hill, or;that improbable country where living is an idyll (although a probable hell) would kill us all. Only the curious have, if they live, a tale worth telling at all. Dogs say he loves too much, is irresponsible, is changeable, marries too many wives, deserts his children, chills all dinner tables with tales of his nine lives Well, he is lucky. Let him be nine-lived and contradictory, curious enough to change, prepared to pay the cat price, which is to die and die again and again, each time with no less pain. A cat minority of one is all that can be counted on to tell the truth. And; what he has to tell on each return from hell is this: That dying is what the living do That dying is what the loving do, and that dead dogs are those who do not know that hell is where, to live, they have to go.
~terry Sat, Mar 21, 1998 (01:36) #17
Truth and Wisdom sat together on a cold, bare rock in the middle of a silent ocean; arguing . . . they quarreled as to which was the most important to mankind in order to instill peace . . . Truth said that she was the most important . . "For peace, there must be genuine, truthful correspond- ence of reality between nations." Yet, Wisdom maintained he was the supreme require- ment . . . "To obtain a tranquil and secure world; learning, wisdom, and the ability to judge all things soundly are essential." Truth and Wisdom are sitting together on a cold, bare rock in the middle of a silent ocean; arguing . . .
~terry Sat, Mar 21, 1998 (01:40) #18
These nine poems are all I received. There are, as I said, at least 150 more that are "lost" and might be retrieved someday. The only one Merle knows for sure is authentic is the one titled "A Somewhat Poem". Merle doesn't know about the others, but he doesn't know many people who have sent him poems. They're not his poems. Helen told Merle in one of her letters that some of her work would be printed in the Cape Girardeau Literary Magazine. Merle's going to try and find out the particulars and mail them to me.
~terry Sat, Mar 21, 1998 (01:43) #19
I can think of no more fitting way to celebrate the fourth anniversary of the Spring than to publish the poetry of Helen Huth and share it with the world.
~pmnh Sat, Mar 21, 1998 (03:26) #20
very beautiful, promising stuff, terry... she had a fascinating mind, it is evident, and a singular, refreshing point of view... and an amazing feel for verse... hope you can bring us a lot more of her work...
~terry Mon, Apr 13, 1998 (06:20) #21
Merle writes that he cannot find the 150 lost poems in his attic. So he's making one last desparate atttempt to get in touch with Helen's deceases sisters husband to see if he might have them. One slim remaining hope that they might be found. Otherwise, the above poems will remain as the only remnants of Helen's substantial body of work.
~Flidais Thu, Apr 16, 1998 (23:53) #22
oh wow....I love them all....what a tragic loss of an amazing mind...yes, there's a definite e.e. cummings influence which is, of course, right up my alley.....thank you so much Terry for sharing these and for making the effort to ensure that death does not silence this incredible voice
~terry Mon, Jul 6, 1998 (09:50) #23
No word yet on the lost poems.
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