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 ]




2025-09-04

 
Haiku - 2025


another bird song
with yet another bird song
and still there's stillness



an old childhood song
from a passing car window
as the ice cream melts



a warm evening breeze,
as good a time as any
to let some things go




2025-09-02

 
Shining

Rays of sun countour temperature,
cluster virginia spiderwort color,
follow slumped bends of gravity
to prism the applause of thunder
after the quick miracle of a rainstorm.
Sunlight so basic. Unbinding elements

for forms that merge a continual.
How it shrinks shadows at the height
of solar noon, how it moves beyond 
what was thinking, an energy with all
which is an entirety that's not a day
greater or lesser than offshoots

of wind. Light of eternal forward,
that the world has fall aslant as it backs
away off on the diagonal, returning
to the personal axis of turning,
what makes for the inertia of time,
the toll on life, gravity's relative older

amassed by the heart balanced in orbit,
as you go elsewhere while earth it stays, 
while light it stays ongoing, right here
and there as it is never to be waiting,
never even grasping, and it too, also
always, always weightlessly passing.


2025-08-31

 
[ Sunflowers ; Andrew Wyeth (1982) ]


2025-08-29

 
--Tony Hoagland

Once, in the cool blue middle of a lake,
up to my neck in that most precious element of all,

I found a pale-gray, curled-upwards pigeon feather
floating on the tension of the water

at the very instant when a dragonfly,
like a blue-green iridescent bobby pin,

hovered over it, then lit, and rested.
That’s all.

I mention this in the same way
that I fold the corner of a page

in certain library books,
so that the next reader will know

where to look for the good parts.


2025-08-27

 
--Jennifer Grotz

Eyes wide like an owl’s, an aspirin-pale face
foretells in lamplight how it accumulates age.
Somewhat masked, somewhat naked, there’s no way
to know what others see when looking at it.
All five of the body’s senses crowd
on this small planet a weather of hair surrounds.
 
My face is not a democracy—the eyes are tyrants
and the ears are radical dissenters.
In the conversations of eyebrows, mine are whispers.
Like the window at night, the face reflects too,
uncertain how to change when greeting itself
(and is it not cruel when another’s face
won’t reflect acknowledgment of you?).
 
My mother, my father, and my brother are found
in the blurring of feature and expression.
Cynicism finds no purchase here;
the same cannot be said for sadness
(and look deeper—anger hides in the jaw).
And while the nose quietly broods
like an actor rehearsing his soliloquy,
the empty page of the forehead, when I raise my brows,
fills suddenly with questions.


2025-08-25

 
--Wallace Stevens

The difficulty to think at the end of day,   
When the shapeless shadow covers the sun   
And nothing is left except light on your fur—

There was the cat slopping its milk all day,   
Fat cat, red tongue, green mind, white milk   
And August the most peaceful month.

To be, in the grass, in the peacefullest time,   
Without that monument of cat,   
The cat forgotten in the moon;

And to feel that the light is a rabbit-light,   
In which everything is meant for you   
And nothing need be explained;

Then there is nothing to think of. It comes of itself;
And east rushes west and west rushes down,
No matter. The grass is full

And full of yourself. The trees around are for you,   
The whole of the wideness of night is for you,   
A self that touches all edges,

You become a self that fills the four corners of night.
The red cat hides away in the fur-light
And there you are humped high, humped up,

You are humped higher and higher, black as stone—
You sit with your head like a carving in space   
And the little green cat is a bug in the grass.


2025-08-23

 
[ Sunrise ; Arthur Dove (1924) ]


2025-08-21

 
--Yvor Winters

Sweeter than rough hair
On earth there is none,
Rough as the wind
And brown as the sun.

I toss high my short arms
Brown as the sun;
I creep on the moutains
And never am done.

Sharp-hoofed, hard-eyed,
Trample on the sun! --
Sharp ears, stiff as wind,
Point the way to run!

Who on the brown earth
Knows himself one?
Life is in lichens
That sleep as they run.


2025-08-19

 
--Yvor Winters

When I was young, with sharper sense,
The farthest insect cry I heard
Could stay me: through the trees, intense,
I watched the hunter and the bird.

Where is the meaning that I found?
Or was it but a state of mind,
Some old penumbra of the ground,
In which to be but not to find?

Now summer grasses, brown with heat,
Have crowded sweetness through the air;
The very roadside dust is sweet;
Even the unshadowed earth is fair.

The soft voice of the nesting dove,
And the dove in soft erratic flight
Like a rapid hand within a glove,
Caress the silence and the light.

Amid the rubble, the fallen fruit,
Fermenting in its rich decay,
Smears brandy on the trampling boot
And sends it sweeter on its way.


2025-08-17

 
-- Yvor Winters

Beyond the steady rock the steady sea,
In movement more immovable than station,
Gathers and washes and is gone. It comes,
A slow obscure metonymy of motion,
Crumbling the inner barriers of the brain.
But the crossed rock braces the hills and makes
A steady quiet of the steady music,
Massive with peace.
And listen, now:
The foam receding down the sand silvers
Between the grains, thin, pure as virgin words,
Lending a sheen to Nothing, whispering.


2025-08-15

 
[ The Other Side of the Rainbow ; Roland Petersen (1972) ]


2025-08-13

 
--D. A. Powell

“Anyway, it isn’t forever,” Chris said,
“eventually you’re dead.” And we laughed

Besides, everything is better now. Not us
but implants, blenders, children, heart attacks.
There’s never been a better time to be alive
than when you are. If you are. Black-throated
blue warbler says chewchewchewchewchewww
drawing the last chew out like a sucking drainpipe
to say he has mated and is satisfied. Say what
you will about that. His joy is uncontainable

and yet it has a form, a measure, to make it clear
he’s not upset or feeling anxious. And if he’s bragging,
well, it’s no shame to brag that you’re happy.

Honeybees cavorting on the goldenrod are working
toward a common goal they’ll never see achieved.
They lay down the walls of their cathedral of honeycomb
and will not cope the spire, busy in the present task,
trusting that the work continues. I’d like to write
a children’s book called everybody dies. Upbeat, of
course, and pragmatic. You only got so many
days. Don’t think about death; when you’re
ready, death will think about you. Go out
tonight with your friends, like Chris, who went out
big or not at all. Have a ball. Plan ahead.


2025-08-11

 
--Lewis Meyers

On the coffin-sized back porch
high above the ground
where anyone worth his salt
pursued his heart's desire,
I didn't know what to do
and asked my mother that.
I was seven. It was August,
the Capital's glandular month;
it came in with morning glories
between its teeth, or darting eyes.
We were in a natural sweat.
My health took the heat off,
but not Baudelaire's boredom
which I wasn't aware I had.
Mother couldn't allay it,
but I thought it must be happiness,
the word on everyone's lips
just before the end of the world.
And I stood on the screened porch,
looking in on the kitchen
while mother made lunch
and Tosca played on the radio,
bored to tears of happiness,
or happily sweating with boredom.


2025-08-09

 
from the sustaining air

fresh air

There is the clarity of a shore
And shadow,   mostly,   brilliance

summer
                the billows of August

When, wandering, I look from my page

I say nothing

      when asked

I am, finally, an incompetent, after all



2025-08-07



 
[ Moto Moon ; Diane Birch ]


2025-08-05

 
--Devin Johnston

We gathered in a field southwest of town,
several hundred hauling coolers
and folding chairs along a gravel road
dry in August, two ruts of soft dust
that soaked into our clothes
and rose in plumes behind us.

By noon we could discern their massive coils
emerging from a bale of cloud,
scales scattering crescent dapples
through walnut fronds,
the light polarized, each leaf tip in focus.

As their bodies blotted out the sun,
the forest faded to silverpoint.
A current of cool air
extended from the bottomlands
an intimation of October,
and the bowl of sky deepened
its celestial archaeology.

Their tails, like banners of a vast army,
swept past Orion and his retinue
to sighs and scattered applause,
the faint wail of a child crying.
In half an hour they had passed on
in search of deep waters.

Before our company dispersed,
dust whirling in the wind,
we planned to meet again in seven years
for the next known migration.
Sunlight flashed on windshields

and caught along the riverbank
a cloudy, keeled scale
about the size of a dinner plate,
cool as blanc de Chine
in the heat of the afternoon.


2025-08-03

 
--Devin Johnston

The feeling of time derives from heat,
an agitation of molecules,
oracles from the friction of air
through fissures and the leaves of oaks.
A few gnats stitch the lake’s edge
where a fox turns off the gravel road
to nose through rhododendron
as children crawl through winter coats
to reach a closet’s dark recess.
Dawdling at the edge of sleep
you work through problems already past
though unresolved, a notional path,
a crease through heads of wild blue phlox
that waking, you can’t follow.



2025-08-01

 
--Devin Johnston

A mockingbird
perched on the hood
of a pay phone
half-buried in a hedge
of wild rose
and heard it ring

The clapper ball
trilled between
brass gongs
for two seconds
then wind
and then again

With head cocked
the bird took note
absorbed the ringing
deep in its throat
and frothed
an ebullient song

The leitmotif
of bright alarm
recurred in a run
from hawk
to meadowlark
from May to early June

The ringing spread
from syrinx to syrinx
from Kiowa
to Comanche to Clark
till someone
finally picked up

and heard a voice
on the other end
say Konza
or Consez or Kansa
which the French trappers
heard as Kaw

which is only the sound
of a word for wind
then only the sound of wind