Five Branch Tree
2026-04-06
2026-04-04
--Dan Beachy-Quick
slow gold, everlasting
forsythia behind the eyes it’s spring
spare no arrows, sparrows
empty the quiver of song
swallows quick allow the earth
a slow life never touched
hyacinth with his head wound never healing
a purple wound in the long spring behind the eyes
owl loud in the old dark wood
who darkens the night and how
in the galingale a lonely hour
the nightingale keeps awake all night
cassandra burns her hand on the cornerstone
the widow looks out the window
pulling apart her grief an empty loom
in the fig trees that fringe the field warblers
sing the dust that blurs the war
the crow puts on another crow’s armor, borrows
a crown, limps away to battle
how surrender but not submit is this the ethic
arms around the knees of whom, who’s there the air
the thrush from distant epochs hushes
the fatherless epic where the child cries
a jar on a hill fills with darkness, the nightjar
sucks milk from a sleeping goat
the logic of dew in the morning is not the logic of noon
a heedful retreat in the face of being
what dampens the blade dampens the root
the earth’s bitter turn, the wind blows west
and the wheat bends, but not the bittern
once again the robin woke me at dawn…
once again the robin woke me…
the cloud is a rock spiritually magnified
the mind is a cloud condensed truth forgets itself
what is narcissus doing now still looking down
into the pool so long ago become air what is the rain
2026-04-02
--Dan Beachy-Quick
No ceremony for the initiation into facts—
Only patience that is not time. The fist
Of the mind grows roots and greens into a fern.
The fern of the mind suffers a solar age
And becomes what it suffers—the sun is not
A star, but a flower. A voice in the eternal
Honey says, What is needed is to think with the flower
Of the mind. Suffer is a word meaning many words—
Endure, experience. The flower endures the sun
By eating it. I only say I when no other word
Will do. What is the world is the world, what is
Not is not. That is the nectar thought. A hive
Or is it a cloud, knowledge gathering darkly above,
Hiding lightning, hiding stings. When the air
Clenches its fist and strikes a blow the sky is clear
Again. More clear than it’s ever been. The day-shy
Stars peek out behind the blinding veil, so very faint,
The snail’s glistening path draws her singular line
West behind the mountains, and already, it’s true,
The eye on its delicate horn trembles up in the east,
That snail, the moon. The humble mind hums.
Gnosis knows. There are no words. Just a tune.
2026-03-31
--Dan Beachy-Quick
The sun brightens the clouds before it breaks
them apart. On the far side of the ocean
there are marble ruins of the broken
temples: the temple each cloud is. Ruin
is faith’s consequence—to house the force
that tears the house apart. The sun is
the yellow shield buckled on to the throat
of the sun-throated warbler—it says
with no words song’s unspeakable fact.
Silence is faith’s consequence—a world of
knowing that knowing is a world of not.
The book called The Sun held a fact one could love
but have no faith in. Close the book. Think,
thinker, in the dark. Moon—quiet the lark.
2026-03-29
2026-03-26
--Louise Glück
I've watched you long enough,
I can speak to you any way I like--
I've submitted to your preferences, observing patiently
the things you love, speaking
through vehicles only, in
details of earth, as you prefer,
tendrils
of blue clematis, light,
of early evening--
you would never accept
a voice like mine, indifferent
to the objects you busily name,
your mouths
smal circles of awe--
All this time
I indulged your limitation, thinking
you would cast it aside yourselves sooner or later,
thinking matter could not absorb your gaze forever--
obstacle of the clematis painting
blue flowers on the porch window--
I cannot go on
restricting myself to images
because you think it is your right
to dispute my meaning:
I am prepared now to force
clarity upon you.
2026-03-24
--Louise Glück
The sun shines; by the mailbox, leaves
of the divided birch tree folded, pleated like fins.
Underneath, hollow stems of the white daffodils, Ice Wings,
........Cantatrice; dark
leaves of the wild violet. Noah says
depressives hate the spring, imbalance
between the inner and the outer world. I make
another case — being depressed, yes, but in a sense passionately
attached to the living tree, my body
actually curled in the split trunk, almost at peace, in the evening rain
almost able to feel
sap frothing and rising: Noah says this is
an error of depressives, identifying
with a tree, whereas the happy heart
wanders the garden like a falling leaf, a figure for
the part, not the whole.
2026-03-22
--Louise GlückDo you know what I was, how I lived? You knowwhat despair is; thenwinter should have meaning for you.I did not expect to survive,earth suppressing me. I didn't expectto waken again, to feelin damp earth my bodyable to respond again, rememberingafter so long how to open againin the cold lightof earliest spring--afraid, yes, but among you againcrying yes risk joyin the raw wind of the new world.
2026-03-20
2026-03-18
Were the endlessly deadto awaken some symbol,within us, to indicatethemselves, they mightpoint to the catkinsdangling from the leaflessbranches of the Hazel trees.Or speak in drops of rainfalling to dark earthin early spring.Then we,who have known joyonly as it escapes us,rising to the sky,would receive theoverwhelming benedictionof happiness descending.--from Tenth Duino Elegy; Rainer Maria Rilke (trans. Robert Hunter)
2026-03-16
......even the most visible
of joys cannot be seen
until transformed-within.
Nowhere, beloved, does any
world exist save that within.
Life spends itself in
the act of transformation,
dissolving, bit by bit,
the world as it appeared.
Where stood a solid house
now stands a mental construct,
entirely conceptual, as though
its rafters supported a
rooftop in the very brain.
The spirit of our time has raised
storehouses of infernal powers,
edifices shapeless as the primal force
he wrenches from creation.
Temples are unknown to him.
It is we who try in secret
to perpetuate such wasteful
luxuriance of the heart.
Yes, if one thing survives
before which we genuflected,
which we served or worshiped,
it passes intact into the invisible.
Many, perceiving it no more,
fail to seize the chance to
build it up anew, with greater
pillars and more commanding statues
than in days of yore-within!
--from Seventh Duino Elegy; Rainer Maria Rilke (trans. by Robert Hunter)
2026-03-14
Who are these rambling acrobats,less secure than even we;twisted since childhood(for benefit of whom?)by an unappeasable will?A will which wrings, bends,swings, twists and catapults,catching them when they fallthrough slick and polished airto a threadbare carpet wornever thinner by their leaping:lost carpet of the great beyond,stuck like a bandage to an earthbruised by suburban skies.
2026-03-11
2026-03-09
2026-02-28
Haiku- Winter 2025/2026
that freight train driving
an obliviousness through
clouds of icy cold
what's brighter than all
the holiday christmas lights,
December's full moon
slowly oh slowly
the garbage can is filling
fresh with white snowfall
my mom's birthday--
all those branches holding strong
the weight of the snow
2026-02-26
Let It Be SongAs It Can Be KnownOutside With YesterdaySnow as a rhythmof color for the cold,pale blue tonethat rests the groundof a prior timethat had a paththat is now blownpointless direction,side-to-side waiver,is such a dance, boundto downward matter.
Inside With TodayEvery word, each songto a moment, fluttersthis sheltered placewith fabric emotionfrom the cubbyholedheart and its beatingcodes of expressionwhich, being exaggerated,also is all awhile waitingupon a simplificationof silent starlight.
A Future With TomorrowLeave it to glow slowlycrepuscular, matutinaland vespertine both,a depth measurednot by numbers butabundant light yearsfathomed widely asmurmuring sounds,applaused by shadows,a distant forevertimed in with color.
2026-02-24
2026-02-22
--Robert Bly
I never intended to have this life, believe me—
It just happened. You know how dogs turn up
At a farm, and they wag but can’t explain.
It’s good if you can accept your life—you’ll notice
Your face has become deranged trying to adjust
To it. Your face thought your life would look
Like your bedroom mirror when you were ten.
That was a clear river touched by mountain wind.
Even your parents can’t believe how much you’ve changed.
Sparrows in winter, if you’ve ever held one, all feathers,
Burst out of your hand with a fiery glee.
You see them later in hedges. Teachers praise you,
But you can’t quite get back to the winter sparrow.
Your life is a dog. He’s been hungry for miles,
Doesn’t particularly like you, but gives up, and comes in.
2026-02-20
Within the circles of our liveswe dance the circles of the years,the circles of the seasonswithin the circles of the years,and the cycles of the moonwithin the circles of the seasons,the circles of our reasonswithin the cycles of the moon.Again, again we come and go,changed, changing. Handsjoin, unjoin in love and fear,grief and joy. The circles turn,each giving into each, into all.Only music keeps us here,each by all the others held.In the hold of hands and eyeswe turn in pairs, that joiningjoining each to all again.and then we turn aside, alone,out of the sunlight goneinto the darker circles of return.--for Guy Davenport; Wendell Berry
2026-02-18
--Kevin YoungToday I do not knowwhat the trees will do—barely believe tomorrowthey will bloomwhites & blues, the dogwoodwinking at you.Reed aboutmy waist. Tomorrowsomething will give way—green will crowdthe winter out—but today all brown, the sky& ground devoureach other, swallowus down. What livesin the buffetingmust bend.The cedar out-lasting winter—how it leans, shedslimbs like a soldier.
2026-02-16
-Jen LevittOn the morning of the new Q train, we passeda woman’s body slumped against a wall.White liquid poured from her mouth like snow,until the paramedics showed up, for whicheveryone was grateful. In my mind I was busyriding a Palomino through a forest, solvingan equation in air. My thoughts hard & soft,a terrain. All week I wanted to talk to youabout this small sad thing, the woman’s purseat her side, hands trembling like my horseat 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
2026-02-12
--Lauren K. Alleyneafter Dean YoungDean in a story about Coltrane:how one time in a recording, he hita 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 beatholding up the heaviness of flesh.
2026-02-10
--Bertolt Brecht (tr. John Willett)Everything changes. You can makeA fresh start with your final breath.But what has happened has happened. And the waterYou once poured into the wine cannot beDrained off again.What has happened has happened. The waterYou once poured into the wine cannot beDrained off again, butEverything changes. You can makeA 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
2026-02-03
--Tricia KnollMore than one, those scraggly black locustslining the gravel road to the white farmhouseand a collapsing barn. Barren: winter unveilstwisted fingers of eerie malaiseplanted for fenceposts rumored tolast longer than stone. Suckering upas toxic clones that scratch wickedturns of withered phrases on pewter sky.That fence hems the pasture, lasteffort to contain the emptinessof a low sun setting on fallow pasture. Ifwinter witch seems too fanciful,thorns too cruel, wind too stiff to break,remember locusts’ white droopsbeguile honeybees in soft seasons –witches hide in green leaf-ery.
2026-01-30
--Tricia KnollWait for ice to paralyzethe pond, for the cracklingthinness to thickenso the under-water moans.Scuffle through rice-snowwhere slush went solidaround someone else's boot.Hike around the hockey rinkand the men and children ice fishingbeside coolers of beer and chips.Let the lake lure youaway from the eyes of cabins,from smoke signalsfanning from chimneys.January's water strider,as small as the lake makes youhidden in a hooded coat.
2026-01-28
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