2025-01-17

 
[ Winter ; Vilhelms Purvitis (1910) ]


 

2025-01-15

 
The Perfect Journey Is
-- A. R. Ammons

The perfect journey is
no need to go

another nothingly clear day and
I went
to walk between the pine
colonnades
up the road on the hill and there
hill-high in dry cold
I saw the weaves of glitterment
airborne, so fine,
the breeze sifting
figurations from the snow
reservoirs of the boughs

2025-01-13

 
Snow of the
-- A. R. Ammons

Snow of the 
right consistency,
temperature, and
velocity will
fall in a lee
slope
building out over
space a
promontory of
considerable
reach in
downward curvature:
and snow
will do this
not once
but wherever possible,
a similarity of effect
extended
to diversity's 
exact numeration

* * *

here a month of snow,
more January than
February, intervenes
during which
I wrote
nothing: it is
the winter-deep, the 
annual sink:
leave it unwritten,
as snow unwrites
the landscape

* * *

  

2025-01-11

 
--A. R. Ammons

It doesn't
matter

to me
if

poems mean
nothing:

there's no
floor

to the
universe

and yet
one

walks the
floor.


2025-01-10

 
[ Tree ; Jacoba van Heemskerck (1918) ]


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 Pastan

As if I had dreamed the snow
into falling,
I wake to a world
blanked out
in its particulars,
nearly erased.

The is the silence
of absolute whiteness- the mute
birds nowhere
in sight, the car
an animal tracks
filled in,

all boundaries,
as in love,
ambiguous.
Sometimes all we have
to go by
is the weather:

a message
the snow writes
an invisible ink,
what the sky means
by its litmus
colors.

Now my breath
on the chilly window
forms a cloud
which may turn
to rain later,
somewhere else.



2025-01-04

 
--Cynthia Cruz

If you leave,
he said,
keep who you are.

Don’t let the world
and its desires
ruin you.

But after the dream
comes the habit.

And no way to fix it.

What is gone
cannot be put back.

Damage
from the inside.

What I have become
is warmed over

with that now
ancient dream.

What I was
is vanished.

I came back home
but I came back
gone.


2025-01-02

 
[ Inside-Outside ; Heidrun Rathgeb (2021) ]



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

 
[ Evening Walk; Deb Garlick (2019) ]



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.


2024-12-21

 
--Carl Phillips

The way the present cuts into history,
or how the future can look at first
like the past sweeping through, there
are blizzards, and there are blizzards.
Some contain us; some we carry
within us until they die, when we do.
The snow falls there, barely snowing,

into a long wooden trough where
the cattle feed on those apples we
used to call medieval, or I did,
for their smallish size, as if medieval
meant the world in miniature but
not so different otherwise from
our own, just smaller, a bit sweeter,
more prone therefore to rot quickly,

which is maybe not the worst thing.
Revelation is not disclosure. I love
how the snow, taking itself now more
seriously, makes the cattle look softer,
for a moment, than their hard bodies are.


2024-12-19

 
--Louise Glück

Toward world's end, through the bare
beginnings of winter, they are traveling again.
How many winters have we seen it happen,
watched the same sign, come forward as they pass
cities sprung around this route their gold
engraved on the desert, and yet
held our peace, these
being the Wise, come to see at the accustomed hour
nothing changed: roofs, the barn
blazing in darkness, all they wish to see.



2024-12-17

 

[ Read to Me ; Deb Garlick ]



2024-12-15

 
                        *               

A poem should be motionless in time   
As the moon climbs,

Leaving, as the moon releases
Twig by twig the night-entangled trees,

Leaving, as the moon behind the winter leaves,   
Memory by memory the mind—

A poem should be motionless in time   
As the moon climbs.

                         * 

--from Ars Poetica; Archibald Maleish



2024-12-13

 
--Archibald MacLeish

The star dissolved in evening—the one star
The silently
                   and night O soon now, soon
And still the light now
                                    and still now the large
Relinquishing
                     and through the pools of blue
Still, still the swallows
                                       and a wind now
                                                            and the tree
Gathering darkness:
                              I was small. I lay
Beside my mother on the grass, and sleep
Came—

          slow hooves and dripping with the dark
The velvet muzzles, the white feet that move
In a dream water
                        and O soon now soon
Sleep and the night.

                              And I was not afraid.
Her hand lay over mine. Her fingers knew
Darkness,—and sleep—the silent lands, the far
Far off of morning where I should awake.


2024-12-11

 
--Archibald MacLeish

The incoherent rushing of the train
Dulls like a drugged pain

Numbs
To an ether throbbing of inaudible drums

Unfolds
Hush within hush until the night withholds

Only its darkness.
                            From the deep
Dark a voice calls like a voice in sleep

Slowly a strange name in a strange tongue.

Among

The sleeping listeners a sound
As leaves stir faintly on the ground

When snow falls from a windless sky—
A stir    A sigh


2024-12-09

 
[ Dark Blue World ; Endre Balint (1947) ]



2024-12-02

 
Haiku- Autumn 2024


early september,
dry cawing of a blue jay
scratched on a north wind


just a simple moth
and yellow in the gingko
slipping through boredom


peak autumn color-
old man sipping his coffee
out on the front porch


post election day,
again I'm finding a world
that's not what I thought


trying to hang on
to that something that's not meant
to be hung on to



2024-11-30

 
When the Other Shoe Drops

Old house, new house, a few
token leaves that hang to the oak,

strung dried like a banjo tuned
to hard tones of falling acorns,

regular efforts, created patterns,
while others are elsewhere

mixed on an air of chance, fate,
fathoms off the smallest twig 

that holds until it won't, like
what gets kept alone and abides

up in the attic while weighing
on down to the slab basement

in creaks, cracks, of wood planks
worn off from a dule tree's hymnal,

sunset apples over the ground
with their vinegar of weariness,

that does pass, is only known
by a heart, a gasp, from what is

and has been a mere second-
meant by you, to last forever.


2024-11-28

 
[ The witness (Clues and fragments cycle) ; Alberto Sughi ]
 

2024-11-26

 
--Czeslaw Milosz

10
Unexpressed, untold.
But how?
The shortness of life,
the years quicker and quicker,
not remembering whether it happened in this or that autumn.
Retinues of homespun velveteen skirts,
giggles above a railing, pigtails askew,
sittings on chamberpots upstairs
when the sledge jingles under the columns of the porch
just before the moustachioed ones in wolf fur enter.
Female humanity,
children's snots, legs spread apart,
snarled hair, the milk boiling over,
stench, shit frozen into clods.
And those centuries,
conceiving in the herring smell of the middle of the night
instead of playing something like a game of chess
or dancing an intellectual ballet.
And palisades,
and pregnant sheep,
and   pigs, fast eaters and poor eaters,
and cows cured by incantations.


2024-11-24

 
--Czeslaw Milosz (trans. Robert Hass)

The word faith means when someone sees
A dew – drop or a floating leaf,
and know that they are, because they have to be.

And even if you dreamed, or
closed your eyes and wished,

The world would still be what it was,
and the leaf would still be carried down the river.

It means that when someone’s foot is hurt
By a sharp rock,

He also knows that rocks are here so they can hurt our feet.
Look, see the long shadow cast by the tree;
And flowers and people throw shadows on the earth:
What has no shadow has no strength to live.


2024-11-22


--Czeslaw Milosz

It appears that it was all a misunderstanding.
What was only a trial run was taken seriously
The rivers will return to their beginnings.
The wind will cease in its turning about.
Trees instead of budding will tend to their roots.
Old men will chase a ball, a glance in the mirror--
They are children again.
The dead will wake up, not comprehending.
Till everything that happened has unhappended.
What a relief! Breathe freely, you who suffered much.


2024-11-20

 
[ American Discovery Viewed by Native Americans ; Thomas Hart Benton ]



Peabody Essex Museum discussion: Benton painting Native Americans

2024-11-18

 
--Robert Bly

There is so much sweetness in children’s voices,
And so much discontent at the end of day,
And so much satisfaction when a train goes by.

I don’t know why the rooster keeps crying,
Nor why elephants keep raising their trunks,
Nor why Hawthorne kept hearing trains at night.

A handsome child is a gift from God,
And a friend is a vein in the back of the hand,
And a wound is an inheritance from the wind.

Some say we are living at the end of time,
But I believe a thousand pagan ministers
Will arrive tomorrow to baptize the wind.

There’s nothing we need to do about John. The Baptist
Has been laying his hands on earth for so long
That the well water is sweet for a hundred miles.

It’s all right if we don’t know what the rooster
Is saying in the middle of the night, nor why we feel
So much satisfaction when a train goes by.


2024-11-16

 
--Andrea Potos

Strings slide in
from somewhere
under,
carve out
the hollows
the deeper
sounds
of our bones.
Once they come—
no escaping
our quiet wounds
that just want to be music now.