2026-02-16

 
-Jen Levitt

On the morning of the new Q train, we passed
a woman’s body slumped against a wall. 
White liquid poured from her mouth like snow, 
until the paramedics showed up, for which 
everyone was grateful. In my mind I was busy
riding a Palomino through a forest, solving 
an equation in air. My thoughts hard & soft, 
a terrain. All week I wanted to talk to you 
about this small sad thing, the woman’s purse 
at her side, hands trembling like my horse
at the stream while we looked & kept walking, 
these details, which make up a poem, a life, 
& could help you know me. All this time, 
I wanted you to understand the emptying in me, 
below the earth, where someone was singing.


2026-02-14

 

[ Ten P.M. ; Jennifer Bartlett (1992) ]



2026-02-12

 
--Lauren K. Alleyne
 
after Dean Young

Dean in a story about Coltrane:
how one time in a recording, he hit
a wrong note—a real clam.
In the second take, he hit it again,
this time harder, longer.
The third time, it became the heart—
the sound all the other notes wrap themselves around,
a different understanding of the melody—
the song beneath the song: the stubborn beat
holding up the heaviness of flesh.


 



2026-02-10

 
--Bertolt Brecht (tr. John Willett)

Everything changes. You can make
A fresh start with your final breath.
But what has happened has happened. And the water
You once poured into the wine cannot be
Drained off again.

What has happened has happened. The water
You once poured into the wine cannot be
Drained off again, but
Everything changes. You can make
A fresh start with your final breath.


 



2026-02-08

 

In the winter I am writing about, there was much darkness. Darkness of nature, darkness of event, darkness of the spirit. The sprawling darkness of not knowing. We speak of the light of reason. I would speak here of the darkness of the world, and the light of _______. But I don’t know what to call it. Maybe hope. Maybe faith, but not a shaped faith—only, say, a gesture, or a continuum of gestures. But probably it is closer to hope, that is more active, and far messier than faith must be. Faith, as I imagine it, is tensile, and cool, and has no need of words. Hope, I know, is a fighter and a screamer.

— from “Winter Hours”; Mary Oliver



2026-02-05

 
[ Winter Landscape ; Valerius de Saedeleer ]
 

2026-02-03


--Tricia Knoll

More than one, those scraggly black locusts
lining the gravel road to the white farmhouse
and a collapsing barn. Barren: winter unveils
twisted fingers of eerie malaise

planted for fenceposts rumored to
last longer than stone. Suckering up
as toxic clones that scratch wicked
turns of withered phrases on pewter sky.

That fence hems the pasture, last
effort to contain the emptiness
of a low sun setting on fallow pasture. If
winter witch seems too fanciful, 

thorns too cruel, wind too stiff to break,
remember locusts’ white droops
beguile honeybees in soft seasons –
witches hide in green leaf-ery. 

 

2026-02-01

 


ice and lights

drawing cards

of mid-winter shuffle

--Tricia Knoll



2026-01-30

 
 --Tricia Knoll
      
Wait for ice to paralyze
the pond, for the crackling
thinness to thicken
so the under-water moans.

Scuffle through rice-snow
where slush went solid
around someone else's boot.
Hike around the hockey rink
and the men and children ice fishing
beside coolers of beer and chips.

Let the lake lure you
away from the eyes of cabins,
from smoke signals
fanning from chimneys.
January's water strider,
as small as the lake makes you
hidden in a hooded coat.

 

2026-01-28

 
[ Hope ; George Frederick Watts (1886) ]



2026-01-26

 
4
Now I am quietly waiting for
the catastrophe of my personality
to seem beautiful again,
and interesting, and modern.

The country is grey and
brown and white in trees,
snows and skies of laughter
always diminishing, less funny
not just darker, not just grey.

It may be the coldest day of
the year, what does he think of
that? I mean, what do I? And if I do,
perhaps I am myself again.

--from Mayakovsky; Frank O'Hara




2026-01-24

 
--Robert Wood Lynn

And when the end came it came silent but clear like bird prints on snow
and no one was surprised to see it arrive
and still friends lingered in doorways letting goodbyes go bad
and chirping cats were fed a second time just to be sure
and the family dogs formed a congress in the woods with the coyotes
and someone was careful to leave bubble wrap for children to burst
and the night watchman pretended his glasses fogged over as we passed
and it turned out the trees were unmemorable
and the government a trick of the light
and it was sorry, the ending, but it didn’t know what for
and it was okay at least as much as we were
and we swam with it in whatever we had on under
and we kissed so hard we clanged teeth
and we ate without speaking
and then at last spoke all at once like an unkinked hose
and then it began, the ending, the way all creatures do, small
and angry at its own misunderstandings.


2026-01-22

 
--C. K. Williams

I hate how this unsummoned sigh-sound, sob-sound,
not sound really, feeling, sigh-feeling, sob-feeling,
keeps rising in me, rasping in me, not in its old disguise
as nostalgia, sweet crazed call of the blackbird;

not as remembrance, grief for so many gone,
nor either that other tangle of recall, regret   
for unredeemed wrongs, errors, omissions,
petrified roots too deep to ever excise;

a mingling rather, a melding, inextricable mesh   
of delight in astonishing being, of being in being,
with a fear of and fear for I can barely think what,
not non-existence, of self, loved ones, love;

not even war, fuck war, sighing for war,
sobbing for war, for no war, peace, surcease;
more than all that, some ground-sound, ground-note,   
sown in us now, that swells in us, all of us,   

echo of love we had, have, for world, for our world,
on which we seem finally mere swarm, mere deluge,
mere matter self-altered to tumult, to noise,
cacophonous blitz of destruction, despoilment,

din from which every emotion henceforth emerges,
and into which falters, slides, sinks, and subsides:
sigh-sound of lament, of remorse; sob-sound of rue,   
of, still, always, ever sadder and sadder sad joy.


2026-01-20

 
[ Crystal Gradation ; Paul Klee (1921) ]


2026-01-17

 

Of all the people born on earth,
only a thin fraction are alive now. So today and everyday

is international ghost day.
When the dirt whispers,

it is simply your mother
calling in the grey light of dawn, tugging you out

from the soft but insistent hands
of a dream that holds you

in the way light is held
by the icicle.

--from My Body Tells Me What to Do; Michael Bazzett




2026-01-15

 
--Michael Bazzett

Let’s put on our childhood clothes
and walk the secret streets.
Let’s remember that in Finland
they have a word that means
drinking at home, alone,
in your underwear. Let’s feel
the give in our bones again,
soft and green as flower stems.
You might not be my brother.
But you’re as close as we both
might get. Let’s use the sides
of our hands to scrape forts
out of the road-sand snowplows
left in the gutters, then watch
as they melt in rain. Let’s remember
old songs again. You can tell me
how chessboards lie about
the rules of war, how Mother’s
sigh was a descending note
that sharpened into nothingness.
Then we’ll each go our separate
ways, slip into our humming
houses, and drink one last pull
of starlight straight from the bottle.


2026-01-13

 
--Michael Bazzett

(for Ada Limon)

Look, it’s not that I believe in him. Nor he
in me. We have moved beyond all that.
I just like having someone there in the dark.
Usually we sit in silence, waiting for passing
headlights to glide across the ceiling and knock
stray prayers loose from where they got
stuck on their way out, so many years ago.
It’s almost like finding old piñata candy,
says God, picking one from the floorboards.
He unwraps it, takes a quick taste. Winces.
Nods like he’s just remembered something
for the thousandth, thousandth time.
What is it? I ask. It’s kind of like chewing
tinfoil, he says. All that aching naked hope.

 

2026-01-11

 
[ In January ; Werner Berg (1972) ]
 

2026-01-09

  
--J. Patrick Lewis

                  for Eleanor Roosevelt

Who showed the world the world itself
     Was awkward, shy and plain.
A high-born leader in a long,
     Low decade full of pain.

Poor farmers, blacks, homeless, the least
     Advantaged hoped to see,
Magnificently unarrayed,
     Pure human dignity.

A lady first, the great first lady
     Looked fear in the face,
And said, There is no room for fear
     When courage take its place.



2026-01-07

 
--Patrick Rosal

Here, my one raucous prayer
coaxed from this poor drum,

my double heart, under a beat-up slat
of divine light. It’s habit: I evade 

the foreseeable blessing, this thorn
thief, this fiend for deep bass 
and the dynamics of  burning— 

now bird, now furnace, I’m returning
to love itself. Let me face 
the beginning of sound, first horn, 

origin of dirt and song. We are made
by touch, not terror for tat, 

but one humble pulse in a numb 
abyss. Bet, god breathes this air.


2026-01-05

 
--Jean Toomer

Whoever it was who brought the first wood and coal
To start the Fire, did his part well;
Not all wood takes to fire from a match,
Nor coal from wood before it’s burned to charcoal.
The wood and coal in question caught a flame
And flared up beautifully, touching the air
That takes a flame from anything.

Somehow the fire was furnaced,
And then the time was ripe for some to say,
“Right banking of the furnace saves the coal.”
I’ve seen them set to work, each in his way,
Though all with shovels and with ashes,
Never resting till the fire seemed most dead;
Whereupon they’d crawl in hooded night-caps
Contentedly to bed. Sometimes the fire left alone
Would die, but like as not spiced tongues
Remaining by the hardest on till day would flicker up,
Never strong, to anyone who cared to rake for them.
But roaring fires never have been made that way.
I’d like to tell those folks that one grand flare
Transferred to memory tissues of the air
Is worth a like, or, for dull minds that turn in gold,
All money ever saved by banking coal.


2026-01-03

 
[ Blotter ; Peter Doig (1993) ]
 

2025-12-30

 
--John Burnside

When we are gone
our lives will continue without us

– or so we believe and,
at times, we have tried to imagine

the gaps we will leave being filled
with the brilliance of others:

someone else gathering plums
from this tree in the garden,

someone else thinking this thought
in a room filled with stars

and coming to no conclusion
other than this –

this bungled joy, this inarticulate
conviction that the future cannot come

without the grace
of setting things aside,

of giving up
the phantom of a soul

that only seemed to be
while it was passing.


2025-12-28

 
--John Burnside

There are times when I think
of the knowledge we had as children:

the patterns we saw in number, or the spells
and recipes we had
for love and fear;

the knowledge we kept in the bones
for wet afternoons,
the slink of tides, the absolutes of fog,

or how a lapwing’s egg can tip
the scale of the tongue;

how something was always present in the snow
that fell between our parish and the next,

a perfect thing, not what was always there,
but something we knew without knowing, as we knew

that everything was finite and alive,
cradled in warmth against the ache of space,

marsh-grass and shale, and the bloodroot we dug in the woods
that turned our fingers red, and left a stain

we kept for weeks, through snow and miles of sleep,
as if it was meant to happen, a sliver of fate
unstitching its place in the marrow, and digging in.


2025-12-26

 
--John Burnside

Nothing is adapted to the fret
of LED and blockwork, snow-drift
gusted over ice into
the hayricks, scraps
of sackcloth, clagging, bodies scabbed with mud
and bedstraw, blotched eyes
searching: finding
nothing; giving in.
 
We know their names
from catalogues and songs; but these
are nothing like, just weather of a sort,
discarnate, eyeless, waiting for a sign:
run of matter blackening the floor,
the ache of rennet, hoofprints in the stone.


2025-12-24

 
[ J. R. R. Tolkien’s illustration for ‘Letter From Father Christmas’ ]
 

2025-12-22

 
--Linda Pastan

Perhaps the purpose of leaves is to conceal
the verticality of trees which we notice in December
as if for the first time: row after row of dark forms
yearning upwards. And since we will be horizontal
ourselves for so long, let us now honor
the gods of the vertical: stalks of wheat which
to the ant must seem as high as these trees do to us,
silos and telephone poles, stalagmites and skyscrapers.
but most of all these winter oaks, these soft-fleshed poplars,
this birch whose bark is like roughened skin against
which I lean my chilled head, not ready to lie down.


2025-12-20

 
December

The white dove of winter
sheds its first
fine feathers;
they melt

as they touch
the warm ground
like notes
of a once familiar

music; the earth
shivers and
turns towards
the solstice.

--from The Months; Linda Pastan




2025-12-18

 
--Linda Pastan

At the waning of the century,
with the weather warming
and even the seasons losing their way

listen to me. It is time
to sit still, to tilt your face
to the light and catch the notes of music

which sweeten the tongue
like snowflakes as they fall and melt
this bare December morning.

Your mouth was shaped for lullaby
or hymn, and your refusal
to sing bewilders

whole octaves of air. Enough
abstinence. Each day
that ends is gone, not a leaf is left

and soon enough it will be
time to sleep under the sway
of all that silence.


2025-12-16

 
[ The Magpie ; Claude Monet (1868/69) ]