Five Branch Tree
2025-02-18
2025-02-16
--Cornelius Eady
My friends,
As it has been proven in the laboratory,
An empty pair of dance shoes
Will sit on the floor like a wart
Until it is given a reason to move.
Those of us who study inertia
(Those of us covered with wild hair and sleep)
Can state this without fear:
The energy in a pair of shoes at rest
Is about the same as that of a clown
Knocked flat by a sandbag.
This you can tell your friends with certainty:
A clown, flat on his back,
Is a lot like an empty pair of
dancing shoes.
An empty pair of dancing shoes
Is also a lot like a leaf
Pressed in a book.
And now you know a simple truth:
A leaf pressed in, say, The Colossus
by Sylvia Plath,
Is no different from an empty pair of dance shoes
Even if those shoes are in the middle of the Stardust Ballroom
With all the lights on, and hot music shakes the windows
up and down the block.
This is the secret of inertia:
The shoes run on their own sense of the world.
They are in sympathy with the rock the kid skips
over the lake
After it settles to the mud.
Not with the ripples,
But with the rock.
A practical and personal application of inertia
Can be found in the question:
Whose Turn Is It
To Take Out The Garbage?
An empty pair of dance shoes
Is a lot like the answer to this question,
As well as book-length poems
Set in the Midwest.
To sum up:
An empty pair of dance shoes
Is a lot like the sand the 98-pound weakling
brushes from his cheeks
As the bully tows away his girlfriend.
Later,
When he spies the coupon at the back of the comic book,
He is about to act upon a different set of scientific principles.
He is ready to dance.
2025-02-14
--Cornelius EadyNew York growsSlimmerIn his absence.I supposeYou could also title this pictureOf Miles, his leatherySquint, the graceIn his fingers a sliver of the stuffYou can’t get anymore,As the rest of us wonder:What was the nameOf the driverOf that truck? And the restOf us sigh:Death is one hellOf a pickpocket.
2025-02-12
--Cornelius EadyYour body, hard vowelsIn a soft dress, is still.What you can't knowis that after you diedAll the black poetsIn New York CityTook a deep breath,And breathed you out;Dark corners of small clubs,The silence you left twitchingOn the floors of the gigsYou turned your back on,The balled-up fists of notesFlung, angry from a keyboard.You won't be able to hear usTry to etch what roseOff your eyes, from your throat.Out you bleed, not as sweet, or sweaty,Through our dark fingertips.We drum restWe drum thank youWe drum stay.
2025-02-10
2025-02-08
--Maggie SmithAll we ever talk of is light—let there be light, there was light then,good light—but what I considerdawn is darker than all that.So many hours between the dayreceding and what we recognizeas morning, the sun crestinglike a wave that won’t breakover us—as if light were protective,as if no hearts were flayed,no bodies broken on a daylike today. In any film,the sunrise tells us everythingwill be all right. Danger wouldn’tdare show up now, draggingits shadow across the screen.We talk so much of light, pleaselet me speak on behalfof the good dark. Let ustalk more of how darkthe beginning of a day is.
2025-02-06
--Maggie Smith
In what I think is a dream,
I look at some manifestation of the past
& say, I know you’re not real. Someone has to.
As most dream-things do, the past
shapeshifts, reconstitutes itself with new
eyes & a new haircut—the past
made over—& then I forget its name.
I forget what I’m doing with the past.
What is that joke about the river?
It’s not really a joke, no more than the past
is really past—the one about water never
being the same water. As it flows past,
the river’s current—now that’s a joke—
is always flowing now, now, now. Past
seven, when I wake from what I think
is a dream—a dream where I tell the past
the truth about itself—it is the present
as it always is. There is no past.
2025-02-04
--Maggie Smith
my daughter says. Unless the car could float.
Unless by car you mean boat. Unless the ocean
turned to ice and promised not to crack.
Unless Greenland floated over here,
having lifted its anchor. Unless we could row
our country there. Our whole continent
would have to come along, wouldn't it? Unless
we cut ourselves free. What kind of saw
could we use for that? What kind of oars
could deliver one country to another?
She asks, Why is Greenland called Greenland
if it’s not green? Why is Iceland called
Iceland if it’s greener than Greenland?
Unless it’s a trick, a lie: the name Greenland
is an ad for Greenland. Who would go
promised nothing but ice? Who would cut
her home to pieces and row away for that?
2025-02-02
2025-01-31
2025-01-29
2025-01-27
2025-01-25
2025-01-23
--Charles Wright
Back here, old snow like lace cakes,
Candescent and brittle now and then through the tall grass.
Remorse, remorse, the dark drones.
The body’s the affliction,
No resting place in the black pews of the winter trees,
No resting place in the clouds.
Mercy upon us, old man,
You in the China dust, I this side of my past life,
Salt in the light of heaven.
Isolate landscape. World’s grip.
The absolute, as small as a poker chip, moves off,
Bright moon shining between pines.
2025-01-21
--Charles Wright
Last night’s stars and last night’s wind
are west of the mountains now, and east of the river.
Here, under the branches of the nine trees,
how small the world seems.
Should we lament, in winter, our shadow’s solitude,
our names spelled out like snowflakes?
Where is it written, “the season’s decrease diminishes me?”
Should we long for stillness,
a hush for the trivial body
washed in the colors of paradise,
dirt-colored water-colored match-flame-and-wind-colored?
As one who has never understood the void,
should I
give counsel to the darkness, honor the condor’s wing?
Should we keep on bowing to
an inch of this and an inch of that?
The world is a handkerchief.
Today I spread it across my knees.
Tomorrow they’ll fold it into my breast pocket,
white on my dark suit.
2025-01-19
2025-01-17
2025-01-15
The Perfect Journey Is-- A. R. AmmonsThe perfect journey isno need to goanother nothingly clear day andI wentto walk between the pinecolonnadesup the road on the hill and therehill-high in dry coldI saw the weaves of glittermentairborne, so fine,the breeze siftingfigurations from the snowreservoirs of the boughs
2025-01-13
Snow of the-- A. R. AmmonsSnow of theright consistency,temperature, andvelocity willfall in a leeslopebuilding out overspace apromontory ofconsiderablereach indownward curvature:and snowwill do thisnot oncebut wherever possible,a similarity of effectextendedto diversity'sexact numeration* * *here a month of snow,more January thanFebruary, intervenesduring whichI wrotenothing: it isthe winter-deep, theannual sink:leave it unwritten,as snow unwritesthe landscape* * *
2025-01-11
2025-01-10
2025-01-08
--Donald Justice
It's snowing this afternoon and there are no flowers.
There is only this sound of falling, quiet and remote,
Like the memory of scales descending the white keys
Of a childhood piano—outside the window, palms!
And the heavy head of the cereus, inclining,
Soon to let down its white or yellow-white.
Now, only these poor snow-flowers in a heap,
Like the memory of a white dress cast down . . .
So much has fallen.
And I, who have listened for a step
All afternoon, hear it now, but already falling away,
Already in memory. And the terrible scales descending
On the silent piano; the snow; and the absent flowers
abounding.
2025-01-06
--Linda PastanAs if I had dreamed the snowinto falling,I wake to a worldblanked outin its particulars,nearly erased.The is the silenceof absolute whiteness- the mutebirds nowherein sight, the caran animal tracksfilled in,all boundaries,as in love,ambiguous.Sometimes all we haveto go byis the weather:a messagethe snow writesan invisible ink,what the sky meansby its litmuscolors.Now my breathon the chilly windowforms a cloudwhich may turnto rain later,somewhere else.
2025-01-04
--Cynthia CruzIf you leave,he said,keep who you are.Don’t let the worldand its desiresruin you.But after the dreamcomes the habit.And no way to fix it.What is gonecannot be put back.Damagefrom the inside.What I have becomeis warmed overwith that nowancient dream.What I wasis vanished.I came back homebut I came backgone.
2025-01-02
2024-12-31
--Simone Weil (tr. by Noah Rawlings)Blazing stars, dotting the night sky’s distant plain,Mute stars, forever frozen, forever spinning blind.You tear from our hearts the days of yesteryear,You toss us to tomorrow, heedless of our will,And we weep, and all our cries to you are vain.Since we must, we’ll follow you, our arms entwined,Our eyes turned toward your brightness pure but bitter.By your light, all sorrows matter little.We fall silent, we stumble on our way.Suddenly it’s there in our hearts: their divine flame.
2024-12-29
--Andrea Jurjević
I fall asleep under the tremolo voice box of the moon
I fall asleep under the scratched cymbal of the moon
The moon that’s the stone lodged in the throat of the night
The night so exiled it wants to find its way back home
I dream about the tough heel of a walnut roll from 1975
And sharing its sweet December bits with a clan of crows
I dream about a crow that’s my imaginary older brother
And a girl dance-swaying her bovine hips into widowhood
I dream of sun shooting itself up between the sharp shanks of hills
Down the ravine a woeful snake rent with a blunt fish knife
I dream of pouring woe into mugs and topping it with red wine
The river man that’s parched and all I have is that wine
In a dream I’m lying on a salamander-sleek slab inside a cave
Beside a skinless drum simmering with fat carp
The fish leaping in and out of the stew are soldiers in a foxhole
In a dream my love stirs that stew with long white oars
I have a native tongue and I grow a foreign one too
I have a need for closed captions when I talk to people
I have no feelings about god and a shipyard of suspicions about men
I also have rooms filled with clocks riffing in double time
I have a longing for the coiling shadows of cypresses
And a pull toward the soft gray hook of the moon
I have memory drawers filled with sweet chicory root
A pull to the purple lip of the sea and its theremin breath
In a naked dream I fall on the dock mum as cargo
Beg the rain to drop song on the pillows of my palms
The moon slips away like a pearly soap bubble
A glistening nipple pulled from a wet mouth
I winter in that waver
My bones are oars and within me a shady lady rows
I wake seasick from the sloshing in my veins
In another country I’m rain
2024-12-27
--Cole Swensen
erodes the line between being and place becomes the place of being
.......time and so
the house turns in the snow is why a ghost always has the architecture of
.......a storm
The architect tore down room after room until the sound stopped. A
.......ghost is one
among the ages at the edge of a cliff empty sails on the bay even when
.......a ship
or the house moves off in fog asks you out loud to let the stranger in
2024-12-25
2024-12-23
--David Ray
Do you have hope for the future?
someone asked Robert Frost, toward the end.
Yes, and even for the past, he replied,
that it will turn out to have been all right
for what it was, something we can accept,
mistakes made by the selves we had to be,
not able to be, perhaps, what we wished,
or what looking back half the time it seems
we could so easily have been, or ought...
The future, yes, and even for the past,
that it will become something we can bear.
And I too, and my children, so I hope,
will recall as not too heavy the tug
of those albatrosses I sadly placed
upon their tender necks. Hope for the past,
yes, old Frost, your words provide that courage,
and it brings strange peace that itself passes
into past, easier to bear because
you said it, rather casually, as snow
went on falling in Vermont years ago.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)