2025-06-29

 
[ Butterflies ; Piroska Szanto ]
 

2025-06-27

 
--Nathan Spoon

I shouldn’t be doing this the room said. I didn’t
know rooms could do anything much less
talk about it I said. Well that’s on you the room
said but at least you know better now. A person
wearing a pink shirt gray jacket and beige pants
was stroking their chin. Another one was wearing
a mask. A big part of living is matching what
you do or say to what else is being done or said
by others. The difficulty is in knowing where to
draw the line. For example the philosophical and
conceptual mind desires to be included with its
casual counterparts such as the need for rest and
idleness. We are living through imperfect times
and clearly deserve all the shit we’ll give ourselves.


2025-06-25

 
--Nathan Spoon

Stemming brightly from a small jar : four flowers. It is like 
the ontology of being unaware of how many selves 
can be contained within a single individual. Be brief 
and then forget what happens next given the theory of 
the lyric driving sheep along in their natural orders. 
That character Parmenides started it sliding to plain 
after plain of natural versus dominator hierarchies like

these. Next came all the rest. Some days it is difficult 
to remember how much a stranger might remember.
Now the hero is gone. They were so great all four flowering
selves are still learning from them. Water is a yarn so hard 
that magic infuses even the corners and crevices of
every sticky law. People are always conflating love 
with new skies and new skies with cunning harmonies.


2025-06-24

 
--Nathan Spoon 
Here comes rain on our roof!
It stays just long enough
to tickle me into writing this.

It stays just long enough
for everybody to get into
a pair of PJs (silk-cotton blend)

and then goes poof! At our best
we exude awesomeness. At our best
we are destined to turn pale

with the rest of humanity.
We are awesome and quick as
decomposing sticks at a trail’s

end. We bend dreams into circles
of green zone satire. We have
mahogany stuffed in our mahogany

ears. To all who are not us
we are sorry to say You’re welcome!
Nature thankfully adores a rumor!

A sunset! A glacier! Clouds
glimmer and cast inevitable
shadows off the groundswell

footrest. I remember you from
that time before we first met
when our eyes were wet

like summertime coasters
as we Ubered noiselessly
between pews. The aristocrats

are failing to panhandle via email.
One aristocrat is sleepily winding
through the face of another.


2025-06-22

 
[ Summer Sky ; David Hockney (2008) ]
 

2025-06-20

 
--Shuntaro Tanikawa

“I gave birth to a fish”
says the woman
“I freed it in the sea right away”
 
Giggling under the breath
I am downtown
people are sick of other people
 
What shall we do now?
Shall we go see
our dead friends?
 
Here I am, not understanding anything
not knowing anything
I open a pocket paperback for now, but
 
All that comes to
my mind is:
It’s a fine day


2025-06-18

 
--Shuntaro Tanikawa

Earth-colored water hesitates, flows
I realize it is a river
The descendant of formless underground dwellers,
the water is heading toward the sea, that much I know
but I don’t know when and how it welled up

As the train crosses the river a young woman next to me yawns
There is something welling up, too, from the shadowy depth of her mouth
Suddenly I realize my brain is more dull-witted than my flesh

Feeling uneasy that I, the flesh, riding a train,
am made mostly of water
I, the brain, prop myself up with words

Sometime in a distant past, somewhere in a distant place
words were much less voluminous, but
their ties to the nether world were perhaps much stronger

Water remains on this planet
morphing into seas, clouds, rains and ice
Words, too, cling to this planet
morphing into speeches, poems, contracts and treaties

I, too, cling to this planet


2025-06-16

 
--Shuntaro Tanikawa (t. by Martin Rock)

1 Shade Tree

In any case, joy lives inside this day
as in the heart of the new sun—
and in dining tables, and in guns,
and even in gods, though they remain oblivious.

In the tree’s shade, human hearts return
to embrace the day’s humility.
Freely, in this place,
one stands for a moment

to read the sky,
to sing the clouds’ song,
to pray, simply because it is time to summon pleasure.

I must forget
that which is beyond forgetting.
The sun glares. The trees glare back.

2 Yearning

In the shadow of the June sun, I accept my fate.
I’ve become alienated even from my own desires.
My yearning dashes about
vainly, with no time to look back.

I’ve made the mistake of loving without conviction.
All the while, just this charming exterior—
flattery without the knowledge of who flatters.
Fields and clouds are such simple things.

Soon, around my small grave,
only people, rocks, and sky will remain. And yet—
what immortal soul remembers tomorrow?

I’ve made the mistake of forgetting the gods.
Without life, how on earth can anything happen?
In the obscure early summer sun, my fate casts a shadow.

3 Homecoming

This was an alien land.
Through the side entrance of this miserable planet,
I was drawn to the darkness of its innermost part
by the profound, mysterious shapes of its rooms.

Who am I?
I have no means to return,
and will continue writing these dispatches
as long as I am here.

I have ceased yearning for other planets.
There is more amusement here than in eternity,
and yet someday, as a postscript, I’ll return.

Most likely, I’ll be called back unexpectedly
from this intimate, foreign land —
My own homecoming, and yet I will not be there.

10 Unknown Person

The car spoke.
The pencil spoke.
Chemistry, itself, spoke.
“You have made us,” they said. “You human.”

I wonder, what would Tanuki think of this?
What would the stars think?
What might the gods think
of this overflowing of passion, this foolish arrogance?

We move toward death, all in a line,
beginning with he who has forgotten how to be alone,
until the unknown person, here, is erased.

The wind blows over the earth at dusk and again over an unknown star.
The gods walk the earth at dusk, the earth which belongs to dusk.
Even over the unknown stars, they walk.


2025-06-13

[ The Blue Chairs II ; Panayiotis Tetsis (1976) ]
 

2025-06-11

 
--Derek Mong

        begin from above. The first line wrote itself
in eraser. Your entrance refills with its cloud.

Can you feel now a dull tug on your pant leg?
You have shadows within shadows.

The poem strips them off like spare parachutes.
Watch their dark mouths briefly glisten

like guardrail reflectors. Leave silence
between them like warm loaves of bread.

Whatever small truth the poem hurtles toward
is already in your pockets. Release it here

and stop breathing. Watch it rain down
like disco ball light. If a story comes in, cold

from the margins, you alone can warm
its feet. To do so you must hold it

beneath the voice that trails you.
You offer the one it becomes on the ground.

The seamless transfer of two people
humming is one scenario in which the poem

successfully ends. In another these couplets empty
and you are a diver climbing their cool tubes

back up to the start. From there you see its finale
clearly, but do nothing to alter its course.

You'll soon crash through a tenth story window.
Do not worry. The poem's safe.

See its thousand shards glint at your feet.


2025-06-09

 
--John Surowiecki

As the light goes, go.
Be the rustling in the grass, the fall from
convention's good graces: learn, or someone
will have you filing files or writing writs,
demonstrating cutlery or selling knowledge

door to door; someone might even drop
your lovely life into a factory and have you
derusting rings on the coolant-spouting
turntable of a vertical lathe.
It's best for everyone that what you know

is generally thought of as general knowledge.
You can find it in pool rooms and roadside bars,
in meadows as inviting as beds, in bedrooms
where it whispers like a ribbon untying;
you can even find it in schools. But be careful:

it's dangerous, inescapable and exact
down to every atom of everything there is,
to every name each thing goes by and every
law each thing obeys. And the best part is,
you always know more than you know.


2025-06-07

 
I want to talk about happiness and well-being, about those rare, unexpected moments when the voice in your head goes silent and you feel at one with the world.

I want to talk about the early June weather, about harmony and blissful repose, about robins and yellow finches and bluebirds darting past the green leaves of trees.

I want to talk about the benefits of sleep, about the pleasures of food and alcohol, about what happens to your mind when you step into the light of the two o'clock sun and feel the warm embrace of air around your body.

--from 'The Brooklyn Follies'; Paul Auster


2025-06-05

 
[ Untitled, June ; Stanley Whitney (1999) ]
 

2025-05-31

 
Haiku- Spring 2025
 

with bitter coffee,
I watch the window cleaner
make a masterpiece



new but no so new,
the scent of cherry blossoms
falling in the rain



2025-05-29

 
At Fulton Cemetery 

Moss filled inscriptions, spring time,
the bareness broken by a fertile
ground, common grackles foraging
their worms, The Conqueror Worm...,
as was said before so I can say again

through meanderings of my own 
within this middle age of life, mild
mundanity with a hint of obliviousness,
that dull momentum of city traffic,
while somehow, swift brevity praised

with hands I  build for an assured
sanctity of transience, extending
some hours where they'll provide
access for a few new memories,
to create off what has been made

before its all spent back down into 
the freedom of specious eternity,
which won't be known but digested
by what's been polished, fragrant,
born in thousandths with a ripe sun.


 

2025-05-27

 
[ Hand ; Abidin Dino (1950) ]


2025-05-25

 
--William Matthews

How easily happiness begins by   
dicing onions. A lump of sweet butter   
slithers and swirls across the floor   
of the sauté pan, especially if its   
errant path crosses a tiny slick
of olive oil. Then a tumble of onions.

This could mean soup or risotto   
or chutney (from the Sanskrit
chatni, to lick). Slowly the onions   
go limp and then nacreous
and then what cookbooks call clear,   
though if they were eyes you could see

clearly the cataracts in them.
It’s true it can make you weep
to peel them, to unfurl and to tease   
from the taut ball first the brittle,   
caramel-colored and decrepit
papery outside layer, the least

recent the reticent onion
wrapped around its growing body,   
for there’s nothing to an onion
but skin, and it’s true you can go on   
weeping as you go on in, through   
the moist middle skins, the sweetest

and thickest, and you can go on   
in to the core, to the bud-like,   
acrid, fibrous skins densely   
clustered there, stalky and in-
complete, and these are the most   
pungent, like the nuggets of nightmare

and rage and murmury animal   
comfort that infant humans secrete.   
This is the best domestic perfume.   
You sit down to eat with a rumor
of onions still on your twice-washed   
hands and lift to your mouth a hint

of a story about loam and usual   
endurance. It’s there when you clean up   
and rinse the wine glasses and make   
a joke, and you leave the minutest   
whiff of it on the light switch,
later, when you climb the stairs.



2025-05-23

 
I have been willing to consider the possibility that pleasure in itself, with regard for it as something that lessens our suffering, offers a consolation, a relief—I wanted to be able to avoid a vocabulary that insists on the secondariness or the tertiariness of pleasure. I would like to say that one of the primary reasons for being alive is to experience the pleasure of being alive. I would like to write as if it were a given to rise and look out the window on a particularly beautiful light on a summer morning, or on one of those winter mornings when snow has fallen and made the whole of New York City quiet, or you name your favorite such sight. To write of the experience of these things without any instinct to translate them into a relationship to humanism or God or philosophy or any idea, but simply because these impressions or perceptions were part of what it means to be human, and maybe because they are as close as we come to understanding the relationship of the human to the divine. That would be fine. I would love to be able to do that. Pleasure is in itself and by itself valuable and important.

--William Matthews (shortly before his death in 1997)


 

2025-05-21

 
--William Matthews

There’s a crack in this glass so fine we can’t see it,
and in the blue eye of the candleflame’s needle
there’s a dark fleck, a speck of imperfection

that could contain, like a microchip, an epic
treatise on beauty, except it’s in the eye of the beheld.
And at the base of our glass there’s nothing

so big as a tiny puddle, but an ooze, a viscous
patina like liquefied tarnish. It’s like a text
so short it consists only of the author’s signature,

which has to stand, like the future, for what might
have been: a novel, let’s say, thick with ambiguous life.
Its hero forgets his goal as he nears it, so that it’s

like rain evaporating in the very sight of parched
Saharans on the desert floor. There, by chance, he meets
a thirsty and beautiful woman. What a small world!


2025-05-20

 
[ Irises ; Kateryna Bilokur ]


2025-05-18

 
-- John Biguenet     

Something, after all, had to fill the spaces,
the vacant interstices between this and that,
between looking through a window at dusk
and finding ourselves embedded in the glass.
Something had to be imagined, a face at least
if not a mouth that might explain just why
we always felt someone's eyes upon us
even if those eyes were really just our own.

Making love, for instance, how could we understand
the two breaths rising above us twined as one,
like a rope cast up into the air that for a moment—
no, longer—stood firm, erect, as if we might climb,
swim along its length out of the depths,
following the murmured bubbles up toward the light
if not to a heaven for—whom else? —others like us,
spent insubstance, sexless and unfleshed?

And afterward, in that fresh, tormenting silence,
as our bodies settled like mud in roiled water
sinking to the bed until nothing solid remained
but the thick clarity of water, and on the other side,
in the sky it seemed, reflections floating above us,
staring back, curious, uncomprehending,
reflections we could not bring ourselves to recognize,
and so we called them—us, that is—angels.


2025-05-16

 
        after Ruth Awad
--Aime Whittemore

Like a violin waiting the bow,
when I thirst, I dream

of bobcats,
dream of bluegills, alligators,
whales, creeks, hot air

balloons, fatherless
animals, windless
coasts, abandoned homes.

I push into the unabashed
territories of longing—violets,
mornings, meadows, tongues—

and the world is delicious again.
We have no idea how to live here.

To forget how you tasted those leggy afternoons
when our bodies spilled
like wine across the floor,

is to admit a hawk into the house.
Is to wring a rag of water.

When I'm in the thicket
with my smaller hungers,
I don't need to know every cave

and what it stores, cool
and damp, for you. I don't need
to know how many nests

are lined with your hair.
There's nothing tame about twilight,
this old song shaking the sweetgum leaves—

when I thirst I dream
like a violin waiting the bow.



2025-05-14

 
--Catherine Pierce

Dear spring, commit. Burst
your bee-and-bloom, your blaze
of blue, get heady, get frocked,
get spun. Enough with your tentative
little breaths, your one-day-daffodils/
one-day-dewfrost. Honeysuckle us
right to our knees. Wake us
with your all-night mockingbirds,
your rowdy tree frogs. Gust
and dust us. Pollen-bomb the Hondas
and front halls, but please, no more
of this considering. This delicate-
tendrilling. Your pale green
worries me. Your barely-tuliped
branches, your slim shoots
any sideways look could doom.
The truth is I don't want to think
about fragility anymore. I can't
handle a blown-glass season,
every grass blade and dogwood
so wreckable. I'm trying hard
to teach the infallibility
of nightlights, to ignore the revving
of my own fallible heart. Spring,
you're not helping. Go all in.
Throw your white blossoms
into my gutters. Flood
my garage, mud my new shoes,
leave me afternoon-streaked
and sweating. Vine yourself
around me. Hold me
to you. Tighter.


2025-05-12

 
[ Untitled ; Samuel Buri (1969) ]
 

2025-05-10

 
--Corey Van Landingham

Why not climb up the mountain
            of delight? To this world’s thin

meridian, why not be
not elsewhere, not cellaring the sulk
and brood, pores cavernous

                        and visible, the rustling
aspen portentous, the sorry

            unsaid. This world. Hello.


2025-05-08

 
                        scujus est solum ejus usque ad coelum —13th c. common law
--Corey Van Landingham

Before man dreamed up the flying machine
                        we owned the air as far above our land

             as we could imagine. Up to infinity. Down
to hell. Because air, in the days of tangible

property, was nothing. No foot had emerged
                        from a shuttle onto the foreign terrain

             of the moon. No satellites passing over the garden.
No drones. The act of a horse, law says,

reaching his head into an adjoining field
                        and biting another horse is a trespass.

            A word, freed from the lips, is in the air
a trespass. Now, in a country divvying up

the sky, unmanned machines will be given
                        innocent passage. People will walk around

            whispering dominium as if to control at least
their breath. So, before the space of utterance

is duly regulated, before the 83 feet of air
                        we own above our heads begins its collapse,

            this. I love you from the depth of the earth
to the height of the sky. I love you upon

land immovable, soil open to exploitation
                        by all. I am for your unreasonable use alone.

            And, when the drone finally interferes
with your possessor’s enjoyment, to an

indefinite extent, I’ll remember a time when
                        men were the ones doing harm with

            their own hands. I’ll remember the words I once
had to give to you, on the porch, in private.


2025-05-06

 
--Corey Van Landingham

Hello—Tonight
we’ll trace the static bough,

temporalis to

tailbone, cool stone,
the childhood grotto

you always sleepless haunt, audible
dripping from the ferns’

pre-Raphaelite, gauzy
frame.

I’m rasping your spine
with the edge of a wooden
spoon. Stranger,

I love  you.
Even if you have no
small chimpanzee to rock you back

and forth.


2025-05-04

 
[ The flowers of madness ; Carl Gustafsson (2019) ]
 

2025-05-02

 
--Rachel Abramowitz

As one drunk into a carriage with no sail.
Thoughtful, I wandered then, reins in hand,
exhaling as best I could, considering.
My friends think I’m right to watch the night’s
portrait carefully as I can, barking aloud and jotting
its scuro into my hushed book. Driving by the park.
The trees scissor the sky into collage, dark blossoms,
filament, encore. Don’t set your best orchards on fire
or drown your fingers or sing to me.
I’ve seen more in the capsized moon than dark-motored history,
and when my horse gets thirsty, I lead him
to the damp earth. He knows what to do.


2025-04-30

 
--Rachel Abramowitz

To look or to listen? Or to touch, to offer
the soft-downed small of the back, like a canvas,

to the blood-rush of both gentleness
and pain, the same blood blooming

against the boundaries. Of course what we touch
is space only, the brain filling in because

it wants to live. We dig because we want to live,
cover because we want to live,

but as the orange on the counter begins
to whiten and fuzz, I don’t think you want to live.

You don’t want to die either, because I have seen you
look at the orange and its death

with something beyond fear
or revulsion: just a decision.

You look at me, deciding. To touch, then, to watch
oneself in another’s hands, to feel, in this moment

of decay, beloved or useful.