2024-04-26

 
[ Untitled ; Stanley Boxer (1958) ]




2024-04-24

 
--e.e. cummings

spring!may--
everywhere's here
(with a low high low
and the bird on the bough)
how?why
--we never we know
(so kiss me)shy sweet eagerly my
most dear

(die!live)
the new is the true
and to lose is to have
--we never we know--
brave!brave
(the earth and the sky
are one today)my very so gay
young love

why?how--
we never we know
(with a high low high
in the may in the spring)
live!die
(forever is now)
and dance you suddenly blossoming tree
--i'll sing

 

2024-04-22

 
--e.e. cummings

i thank You God for most this amazing
day:for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
and a blue true dream of sky; and for everything
which is natural which is infinite which is yes

(i who have died am alive again today,
and this is the sun’s birthday; this is the birth
day of life and of love and wings: and of the gay
great happening illimitably earth)

how should tasting touching hearing seeing
breathing any–lifted from the no
of all nothing–human merely being
doubt unimaginable You?

(now the ears of my ears awake and
now the eyes of my eyes are opened)


2024-04-20

 
--e.e. cummings

i am a little church(no great cathedral)
far from the splendor and squalor of hurrying
– i do not worry if briefer days grow briefest,
i am not sorry when sun and rain make april

my life is the life of the reaper and the sower;
my prayers are prayers of earth’s own clumsily striving
(finding and losing and laughing and crying)children
whose any sadness or joy is my grief or my gladness

around me surges a miracle of unceasing
birth and glory and death and resurrection:
over my sleeping self float flaming symbols
of hope, and i wake to a perfect patience of mountains

i am a little church(far from the frantic
world with its rapture and anguish)at peace with nature
– i do not worry if longer nights grow longest;
i am not sorry when silence becomes singing

winter by spring, i lift my diminutive spire to
merciful Him Whose only now is forever:
standing erect in the deathless truth of His presence
(welcoming humbly His light and proudly His darkness) 

 

2024-04-18

 

[ In the spring in the park, near the children's
pendulum ; Alfred Freddy Krupa (1992) ]


2024-04-16

 
--Donald Justice

R. B. VAUGHN speaks:
“After so many years of pursuing the ideal
I came home. But I had caught sight of it.
You see it sometimes in the blue-silver wake
Of island schooners, bound for Anegada, say.
And it takes other forms. I saw it flickering once
In torches by the railroad tracks in Medellín.
When I was very young I thought that love would come
And seize and take me south and I would see the rose;
And that all ambiguities we knew would merge
Like orchids on a word. Say this:
I sought the immortal word.”
                              So saying he went on
To join those who preceded him;
                              and there were those that followed.


2024-04-14

 
--Donald Justice

This poem is not addressed to you.
You may come into it briefly,
But no one will find you here, no one.
You will have changed before the poem will.

Even while you sit there, unmovable,
You have begun to vanish. And it does not matter.
The poem will go on without you.
It has the spurious glamor of certain voids.

It is not sad, really, only empty.
Once perhaps it was sad, no one knows why.
It prefers to remember nothing.
Nostalgias were peeled from it long ago.

Your type of beauty has no place here.
Night is the sky over this poem.
It is too black for stars.
And do not look for any illumination.

You neither can nor should understand what it means.
Listen, it comes without guitar,
Neither in rags nor any purple fashion.
And there is nothing in it to comfort you.

Close your eyes, yawn. It will be over soon.
You will forget the poem, but not before
It has forgotten you. And it does not matter.
It has been most beautiful in its erasures.

O bleached mirrors! Oceans of the drowned!
Nor is one silence equal to another.
And it does not matter what you think.
This poem is not addressed to you.


2024-04-12

 
--Donald Justice

It's not a landscape from too near.
Like sorrows, they are require some distance
Not to bulk larger than they are.
The risk is, backing off too far.
But finger trees are hand from here,
The wounds of mines, the growth of pines
Both appear and disappear.
There's but a shagginess remains,
An olive or a purple haze,
The nice unshaven atmosphere
Of average faces, average hills.

Whatever goats are dancing there,
Being all invisible,
Animate objects of a will
Contemplative without desire,
Suffer no vertigo at all
But dance until our spirits tire,
Or dine forever, or until
The speculative garbage fail--
Tin cans and comic books-- which small
Imaginary campers there
Forgot against this very hour.



2024-04-10


[ Galloping Horse ; Xu Beihong (1937) ]



2024-04-08


--Rae Gouirand

In the dream, matter was mine.
The muscle, the teeth, the breath rushing

out of burned throat and through
those teeth into air, where it became

indistinguishable. On my legs, I raced,
the machinery of my animal syncing

lift and drop between front and back,
the pairs oddly right, as though

I've had them in waking, as though I've
known a horse's run from inside.

But that wasn't the plot. Just
as I knew I was that, just as I could

hold it in my mind at the same time
I could simultaneously express

I was born to move like this,
I felt concrete beneath

my landings, and the approaching
vibration of metal wheels faster

than I could make my mind
my legs, and those, those red roads

under me, those fine bones under
the balance of my animal, entered

the field of what could undo them,
were subject to what could undo them ,

and their running turned—and
there was my heart, racing for

the red cave where I had lived,
no longer a place I could rest

my word for myself. There are
two ways a horse can run: from

accord, and from will. One is
the way a living thing runs.


2024-04-06


--Rae Gouirand

Now where are all my new recipes?
Now where is my smoother leather?
Now where is my little breeze? I have
been keeping these straps up far too long.

Time to upright the shelves
of references. I'll hide the remains.
I'll fling open this window & wave
geraniums above the avenue. Set my eyes

on the night & get caught up in it.
Reminder of the stitches to be removed.
Reminders of devotions. Let's not neglect
the long dusty lines settled into the carpets. Let's

pretend to be putting it all back
where it came from. I'll be signing
my name at the bottom of these letters.
Doyenne of a mind. Surrounded on all sides.

 

2024-04-04

 
--Rae Gouirand

What if: stone is what
you get. A gun of stone. What if

the table beneath it were:
& the walls catching the sound. What

if no one knew: you were
around. If people came: from stone

& found only that.
What if stones were: deaf & mute

& cold. What could be
warmed. What word would you hurl.

At what would you point
your blood. Of what is a stone:

composed: what holds what
to itself. What is there to break it

& why when it goes does it
go only: to smaller ones. A stone

has no center but itself. It only
breaks; it does not change. It only

goes from one to many. Stones
always exist. Stones always exist.

Stones always exist. Stones
always exist. There is no way out of this.


2024-04-02


[ Gray Morning ; Henry Villierme ]


2024-03-31

 
--William J. Harris

Why did it
take all
day
to get nothing
accomplished

Why, I could
have started
at noon
& saved a lot
of time

2024-03-29

 
--William J. Harris

As long as people
continue to wear
ears
there won’t
be much
peace and quiet
in this world.


2024-03-27

 
--William J. Harris

Garbage trucks
Groaning

Garbage cans
Banging

Car alarms
Sounding off

Noisy pushy
Birds

Waking me at
Dawn

With their
Smartass songs


 

2024-03-25


[ Rhythmic Composition ; Ernst Wilhelm Nay (1951) ]


2024-03-23

 
--John Brehm
       
So sexy to slide under-
neath a river,
to sit inside this
snakelike sub-
marine-like
subway car and
freely imagine
the world above—
the Brooklyn
Bridge invisibly
trembling with the
weight of its
own beauty,
the East River
still guided by
the grooves
Walt Whitman's
eyes wore in it,
the bulldog tug-
boats pushing the
passively impressive
broad-bottomed
barges around,
and the double-
decker orange
and black Staten
Island Ferries,
with their aura
of overworked
pack-mule
mournfulness,
and beyond them
the Atlantic Ocean
which I lately learned
was brought here
by ice-comets three
billion years ago,
which explains
a few things, like
why everybody
feels so alienated,
and of course
the thoughts being
thought by every
person in New
York City at
this moment—
vast schools of
undulating fish
curving and rising
in the cloud-swirling
wind-waved sky,
surrounded by
the vaster emptiness
of nonthought
which holds them
and which they try
not to think
about and you
lying in bed in
your sixth-floor
walk-up sublet
on St. Mark's Place—
such a breath-
taking ascension!
imagining me
rising now to meet you.


2024-03-21

 
--John Brehm
       
There's something to be said
for having nothing to say,

though I don't know what
that is, or isn't, just as

there's something to be
known about not-knowing,

which I would tell you
if I could. There must be

something to be gained
by losing, a seed of victory

buried in every failure,
else I would not be here.

Clearly, there's something
to be desired about being

beyond desire, as the sages
never tire of telling us,

and nothing more fulfilling
than emptying yourself out—

no ground beneath your feet,
nothing to hold onto, no handrail,

no belief, only this bright self-
sustaining air, and a falling

that feels like floating.


 

2024-03-19

 
--John Brehm

Mostly they live in the dark
underwater weed-slithering
currents and worry about

being swallowed up by their
more furious brethren.
Some of them have eyes

perched atop long thin stems
like flowers. And some
have forty or fifty arms

pocked with suction cups
to help them stick to things
and will squirt black

clouds of ink to keep
themselves concealed. Others
resemble subtropical

dottybacks or scaleless deepsea
gulper eels, with their
velvety bodies, zipper teeth,

and whip-like tails. The fearsome
dragonfish—likewise the
viperfish, hatchetfish,

and bristlemouth—all find their
corollaries in the Red Sea
of my heart. Even

the phantom glass catfish,
entirely translucent except
for its intestines,

is no stranger to my feelings.
The unforthcoming among them
behave just like shovelnose

stingrays who flop right down
in the bottom-ooze and flick
the muck up over them.

But some of them, when they
swim too near the surface,
find themselves suddenly

exalted, lifted and flying
through the air, wind-filled,
sunlight-sharpened sky

expanding around them, high
above their proper element— 
birdclaws sunk into their backs.


 

2024-03-17

 

[ Memory of a Dream March 15, 1919 ; Charles Burchfield ]



2024-03-15

 
--Robert Duncan

I know a little language of my cat, though Dante says   
that animals have no need of speech and Nature   
abhors the superfluous.   My cat is fluent.   He   
converses when he wants with me.   To speak

is natural.   And whales and wolves I’ve heard   
in choral soundings of the sea and air
know harmony and have an eloquence that stirs   
my mind and heart—they touch the soul.   Here

Dante’s religion that would set Man apart   
damns the effluence of our life from us   
to build therein its powerhouse.

It’s in his animal communication Man is   
      true, immediate, and   
in immediacy, Man is all animal.

His senses quicken in the thick of the symphony,
      old circuits of animal rapture and alarm,
attentions and arousals in which an identity rearrives.
      He hears
particular voices among
      the concert, the slightest   
rustle in the undertones,
      rehearsing a nervous aptitude   
yet to prove his. He sees the flick
      of significant red within the rushing mass
of ruddy wilderness and catches the glow
      of a green shirt
to delite him in a glowing field of green
      —it speaks to him—
and in the arc of the spectrum color   
      speaks to color.
The rainbow articulates
      a promise he remembers   
he but imitates
      in noises that he makes,

this speech in every sense   
the world surrounding him.
He picks up on the fugitive tang of mace
      amidst the savory mass,
and taste in evolution is an everlasting key.
      There is a pun of scents in what makes sense.

      Myrrh it may have been,
the odor of the announcement that filld the house.

      He wakes from deepest sleep   

upon a distant signal and waits   

      as if crouching, springs

      to life.


2024-03-13

 
--Emily Lee Luan

is the bleat of the sandhill crane
is the hush of the autonomous mind        of the flame above the canyon
is the cow drinking water from mud          is the cow and the word cow
is the deckled face in the overhang of stone
is the bone weathered into wood
is the wood weathered to stone
is the sentence
is the moment that longs to be the sentence hidden in a sentence
is the legislated road         is the grass is the grass
is the nerve that runs from socket to wrist
is the common knowledge of aperture and speed
is the hole to be yawned into         its origin         the stone that says
the impulse of water         is the moss against
is the growing in spite of


2024-03-11

 
--Jay Wright

The pentatonic spring washes its winter clothes.
Five is a difficult color—
not this green of reflected sky, nor the red
clamor of midnight riding by on a church bell.
Think of the Greek of it,
an Egyptian river,
the dry desert voice you hear in the cleansing.
All before this moment found its own measure,
an ingenious inganno, a blessure
occasioned by a consonant's turmoil,
a Germanic algebra brightly a-boil
through all the strings, a fortspinning always pure,
always a public shrine to a wood secure
in its origin.
                            White is a difficult
sound in the edowa above the tumult
fastened to the soul of widows, magnitude
that arms the darkest nebula. The rude
dead awaken to another baptism.

2024-03-09

 
[ Untitled ; Pierre Roy ]



2024-03-03

 
Haiku- Winter 2023/2024


a lack of sunshine
gradually again replaced
by rain and then snow


another new year,
all that sweet melancholy
is getting so old


hard arctic freeze-
my backdoor
froze shut


leaving the warm bed
unraveled and was perfect
for the winter blues



2024-02-29

 
Delimitation

How was it? And how is it? The perpetual birthday of one
that is personally yours and yours to have as needed.
As many as you might like to fully arrive back to the brand new.
A clearing after replacing and forever losing the birthday
never asked for, the one that was the year's or theirs
and not to be much more, back when you were young but once.
Which is now gone. And now the choice to be old again,
again and again. What follows, what's held off, and waits
for experience to reveal those extended ages and then
the light that arrives as your air takes to breathe in the barren,
so you can say this is okay, while you walk in the midst of waking
through the no longer not too far off distance of evening, that arises
after the new year is never ever new but always instead, anew--
as lone wind is understood, when finally here as you always were.



2024-02-27

 
[ Tree Trunks ; Léon Spilliaert ]


2024-02-25

 
--Chelsea Woodard
       
Wide-lobed threes of trillium leaves taped
and labeled, trifoliate veins, wrinkles dried
and finite as her penciled marks beneath.
My hands are attuned to the weight of pages pressed
long on such fragile anatomies—pistils of lilies,
cowslip petals, delphinium halos and bright spikes
of iris, ovaries and ovules tenderly picked,
patterned and splayed. I know the body

of desire could fill a book and still spill
out. It isn't a question of will, or killing
for pleasure, for beauty that's flattened and lasts past
the end of one season, where we've lived in bloom
and hate to leave. Late February casts
its defeatist light and I quit this reliquary now, this room.


2024-02-23

 

ENVOI

In the world of dreams I have chosen my part,
   To sleep for a season and hear no word
Of true love’s truth or of light love’s art,
   Only the song of a secret bird.

--from 'A Ballad of Dreamland'; Algernon Charles Swinburne