2025-11-06

 
--Matthew Rohrer

On someone else’s estate
running through it to avoid
the outdoor wedding there is a grave
in a little copse of trees
so panting we hang out there

How beautiful to lie down
not to be the dead ones there
their eye sockets filled with dirt
nothing is theirs anymore
you pass me a crumpled joint

swaying a little like a poem
while black birds wail in the air
and the commuter train wails
all we have to do is make tacos
tonight and be friends


2025-11-04

 
[ Statue in a Cemetery ; Endre Balint (1959) ]
 

2025-11-02

 
--Kahlil Gibran

Once, as I was burying one of my dead selves, the grave-digger came by and said to me, “Of all those who come here to bury, you alone I like.”
 
Said I, “You please me exceedingly, but why do you like me?”
 
“Because,” said he, “They come weeping and go weeping—you only come laughing and go laughing.”


2025-10-31



--Lindsay Turner

Some yellow sunflowers open down the street,
A ladder is open beneath someone’s apple tree.
Beneath a dead sky the contours are flattened.
So the land of the dead is closer today.

The land of the dead, they say, is closer.
But what if my lot lies with the living?
Out in the yard a long-billed bird eats something from dust.
Its throat has a dark patch in the shape of a smile
But full, as if its throat had been slit open.

But look, the bird is still pecking and alive.
Elsewhere, a sports game, ropes of rain come down and open the earth.
Here it’s so dry they’d just roll off the dust.

But what if my loves, like the bird, are living?
What if my loves, like the bird, are living for now?

Most of the apples have already fallen.
The sunflowers turn into dusty spiked balls.
But what if my land is the land of the living?
The bird from the dust takes flight
Then turns multiple—

A handful of birds rising in the dead sky
Opened to receive them. 
But my loves for now are here and living, and I want more of them.
Like the bird on the ground I pick what I need from the dust.


2025-10-30

 
--Bruce Bond

The guard dog at the wrecking yard, chained
to a garage, sleeps right through his shift.
He has been briefed, but what do you need
to know. He is a prince of shadows now,
of accidental loss and whatever ghost
comes this way to comb the parking lot
of death machines, looking for survivors.
If anyone, a dog would know. No matter.
In a place like this, all dreams are good
dreams now, however grim and unresolved.
Why howl at the soul who comes and goes.
If not here, where, where if not in the great
hereafter in which, come dawn, a dog will raise
his eye, and sigh, and close it down again.


2025-10-28

 
[ Avenue of Plain Trees ; Santiago Rusinol (1916) ]


2025-10-26

 
--Fanny Howe

Yellow goblins
and a god I can swallow:

Eyes in the evergreens
under ice.

Interior monologue
and some voice.

Weary fears, the
usual trials and

a place to surmise
blessedness.



2025-10-24

 
--Fanny Howe

I want to leave this place
unremembered.
The gas stove is leaking
and the door of the refrigerator
stained with rust.
The mugs are ugly
and there are only two forks.
The walls are black
and soft, the bed a balloon
of night-clothing.
The stairwell sloped
to a dragger’s pace.

There are big windows
with blind-slats dusty
and gray. Street life
goes all night and at dawn
freedmen shout and
laugh outside the kitchen.

Where does life begin and end?
In the lamb or the cotton?
My pillow is my friend.


2025-10-22

 
-Fanny Howe

Infinite nesting
pushes all matter
towards emptiness:
child-nodes,
tree-droppings
with a root element of null.
None is always included
in every cluster
of children.

Nothing in nothing
prepares us.

Yet a fresh light was shed
on immortality
for me climbing the stairs
firm foot first.

Everything was in the banister:
crows on branches, crickets,
architects, handsaws and democrats.
Red moon at 3 am.


2025-10-20

 


[ October Gold ; Franklin Carmichael (1922) ]



2025-10-18

 

--Czesław Miłosz (transl. by Robert Hass)

A valley and above it forests in autumn colors.
A voyager arrives, a map led him here.
Or perhaps memory. Once, long ago, in the sun,
When the first snow fell, riding this way
He felt joy, strong, without reason,
Joy of the eyes. Everything was the rhythm
Of shifting trees, of a bird in flight,
Of a train on the viaduct, a feast of motion.
He returns years later, has no demands.
He wants only one, most precious thing:
To see, purely and simply, without name,
Without expectations, fears, or hopes,
At the edge where there is no I or not-I.


 

2025-10-16

 
from October
--Louise Glück

4.

The light has changed;
middle C is tuned darker now.
And the songs of morning sound over-rehearsed. 

This is the light of autumn, not the light of spring.
The light of autumn: you will not be spared.

The songs have changed; the unspeakable
has entered them.

This is the light of autumn, not the light that says
I am reborn.

Not the spring dawn: I strained, I suffered, I was delivered.
This is the present, an allegory of waste.

So much has changed. And still, you are fortunate:
the ideal burns in you like a fever.
Or not like a fever, like a second heart.

The songs have changed, but really they are still quite beautiful.
They have been concentrated in a smaller space, the space of the mind.
They are dark, now, with desolation and anguish.

And yet the notes recur. They hover oddly
in anticipation of silence.
The ear gets used to them.
The eye gets used to disappearances.

You will not be spared, nor will what you love be spared.

A wind has come and gone, taking apart the mind;
it has left in its wake a strange lucidity.

How privileged you are, to be passionately
clinging to what you love;
the forfeit of hope has not destroyed you.

Maestoso, doloroso:

This is the light of autumn; it has turned on us.
Surely it is a privilege to approach the end
still believing in something.


2025-10-14

 
--William Henry Davies

Welcome to you rich Autumn days,
Ere comes the cold, leaf-picking wind;
When golden stocks are seen in fields,
All standing arm-in-arm entwined;
And gallons of sweet cider seen
On trees in apples red and green.

With mellow pears that cheat our teeth,
Which melt that tongues may suck them in;
With blue-black damsons, yellow plums,
Now sweet and soft from stone to skin;
And woodnuts rich, to make us go
Into the loneliest lanes we know.




2025-10-12

 
[ Autumn ; Hans Richter (1917) ]


2025-10-10

 
--Norma Cole

measure how silence
sits on the ground
 
the same rills, clay tablets,
gravel and stones, frozen
 
moments measure displacement
consequence the records of
 
common consent, displacement
sugar pills killing time now or
 
how the most euphonious cadence
a reed stylus, rosewater and
 
mint, the slope, distortion
meaning stay safe, tenderness
 
the fleeting constraints, sites
of conscription expanding
 
meeting control at the site
of precipitous inquiry
 
could it take the weight of
a frozen moment


2025-10-08

 
--Norma Cole

Take history
Take power
 
At no point sufficient
Accident of memory
 
The common truth
Conditions of visibility
 
Unstable orbits
Explain nothing
 
In the history
Of contestation
 
Truth cure—it’s a start
Unfit for use
 
Nescio, not knowing
Task or matter
 
Insufficient uncertainties
Pose limits of understanding
 
The commission
Memory itself


2025-10-06

 
--Norma Cole

       The chatter of the world is just a breath
       Dante, Purgatorio

Conditions in the moment
conditions in the present moment
conditions are melting in the present moment
 
loss in different tempi, a striking
concentration of them, in it and
of it, but when the state withdraws
 
from the social contract, a walking dream
the armature a striking concentration
removes system from sound
 
some day will mean these large scale
stained glass windows seem essential
to private time: moon in Scorpio
 
fallen asleep but not where you
wake up: can you place this photo
from the broken old bible? Tell us
 
the end and ruin everything, the pink
cloud, the ridgeline and everything
grassland, aspen groves, stand of
 
redwoods, trees make the light
sense of distance, prospect
everchanging feverish refraction
 
mind not inclined for the story’s
not found here


2025-10-04

 
[ Black Grouse ; Theodor Severin Kittelsen (1900) ]



2025-10-02

 
--Andrew Hemmert

But stars aren’t cold, no matter the distance, no matter what
we want to believe. The coldest one we’ve yet found is still
warmer than a cup of coffee left sitting for a minute.
There’s an iceberg frigidity we inject into our gods—
something like the Arctic Ocean, something like a parade
of the dismembered bodies of glaciers. I remember
seeing the scattering fleets of ice and thinking churches
floating out into space. So hello universe! My name
is temporary and my bones are made of you, you
with your far mountaining nebulas, you with your fires
that have shown us the way, that show us how there is no way
except where we already dream of going. October
and the nights are growing cold. October and the nights
are full of stars saying there is nowhere left to go.


2025-09-30

 
--Andrew Hemmert

Like a dollar I am depreciating all the time.
Like a lighthouse throwing the net of my pretend moon 
on the predator shoreline. Like an invasive boar 
I have been known to root and roll in rain and dirt and roam.
Like the earth sometimes in love with turning away from all light 
though never really leaving. Like a beach I have wanted 
to spend years softening though not always wanting the footprints 
which to ghost crabs are craters. Like a paleontologist 
resisting always the impulse to ransack my skeletons  
for drumsticks, though here is the gong, here is the timpani 
like a bird bath full of absinthe before me. So so long 
oblivion with your small dreams of silence. I am going 
to the bank of myself with my pockets hanging out 
like two ruined countries, like two broken and gorgeous wings.


2025-09-28

 
--Andrew Hemmert

was what the search engine recommended before I could
finish my intended question—what kind of bird changes
its song? The bird in the old oak over my parents' pool
goes through phrases in approximately five second
intervals. It is a busy song. It is nothing special
says a hanger full of blinking servers whose thinking requires
a mountain full of coal be dynamited every day.
Some mountains were once considered gods. Some kings were considered
gods, then carved up in the public square. This is progress
towards democracy, which is a name America
has never worn well. The search engines eat what we feed them
and shit out tailored advertisements. These advertisements
perhaps are more evocative of ourselves than our names
though don't we go on saying our names, mockingbird?


2025-09-25

 
[ Large Pine and Red Earth ; Paul Cezanne ]
 
 
 
--Christian Wiman

Love's last urgency is earth
and grief is all gravity

and the long fall always
back to earliest hours

that exist nowhere
but in one's brain.

From the hard-packed
pile of old-mown grass,

from boredom, from pain,
a boy's random slash

unlocks a dark ardor
of angry bees

that link the trees
and block his way home.

I like to hold him holding me,
mystery mastering fear,

so young, standing unstung
under what survives of sky.


2025-09-23

 
--Christian Wiman

A town so flat a grave's a hill,
            A dusk the color of beer.
A row of schooldesks shadows fill,
            A row of houses near.

A courthouse spreading to its lawn,
            A bank clock's lingering heat.
A gleam of storefronts not quite gone,
            A courthouse in the street.

A different element, almost,
            A dry creek brimming black.
A light to lure the darkness close,
            A light to keep it back.

A time so still a heart's a sound,
            A moon the color of skin.
A pumpjack bowing to the ground,
            Again, again, again.



2025-09-21

 
--Christian Wiman

All my friends are finding new beliefs.
This one converts to Catholicism and this one to trees.
In a highly literary and hitherto religiously-indifferent Jew
God whomps on like a genetic generator.
Paleo, Keto, Zone, South Beach, Bourbon.
Exercise regimens so extreme she merges with machine.
One man marries a woman twenty years younger
and twice in one brunch uses the word verdant;
another’s brick-fisted belligerence gentles
into dementia, and one, after a decade of finical feints and teases
like a sandpiper at the edge of the sea,
decides to die.
Priesthoods and beasthoods, sombers and glees,
high-styled renunciations and avocations of dirt,
sobrieties, satieties, pilgrimages to the very bowels of  being ...
All my friends are finding new beliefs
and I am finding it harder and harder to keep track
of the new gods and the new loves,
and the old gods and the old loves,
and the days have daggers, and the mirrors motives,
and the planet’s turning faster and faster in the blackness,
and my nights, and my doubts, and my friends,
my beautiful, credible friends.


2025-09-19

 
[ On the Earth ; Viktor Vasnetsov ]
 

2025-09-17

 
--Charles Simic

Every morning I forget how it is.
I watch the smoke mount
In great strides above the city.
I belong to no one.

Then, I remember my shoes,
How I have to put them on,
How bending over to tie them up
I will look into the earth.


2025-09-15

 
--Charles Simic

You give the appearance of listening
To my thoughts, O trees,
Bent over the road I am walking
On a late summer evening
When every one of you is a steep staircase
The night is slowly descending.

The high leaves like my mother’s lips
Forever trembling, unable to decide,
For there’s a bit of wind,
And it’s like hearing voices,
Or a mouth full of muffled laughter,
A huge dark mouth we can all fit in
Suddenly covered by a hand.

Everything quiet. Light
Of some other evening strolling ahead,
Long-ago evening of silk dresses,
Bare feet, hair unpinned and falling.
Happy heart, what heavy steps you take
As you follow after them in the shadows.

The sky at the road’s end cloudless and blue.
The night birds like children
Who won’t come to dinner.
Lost children in the darkening woods.


2025-09-13

 
--Charles Simic

The snail gives off stillness.
The weed is blessed.
At the end of a long day
The man finds joy, the water peace.

Let all be simple. Let all stand still
Without a final direction.
That which brings you into the world
To take you away at death
Is one and the same;
The shadow long and pointy
Is its church.

At night some understand what the grass says.
The grass knows a word or two.
It is not much. It repeats the same word
Again and again, but not too loudly.


2025-09-11

 
[ Butterflies ; Piroska Szanto ]