Wednesday, December 22, 2021

1078. The Storm - Mary Oliver

Now through the white orchard my little dog

romps, breaking the new snow

with wild feet.

Running here running there, excited,

hardly able to stop, he leaps, he spins

until the white snow is written upon

in large, exuberant letters,

a long sentence, expressing

the pleasures of the body in this world.


Oh, I could not have said it better

myself.

Tuesday, December 07, 2021

1077. From the book: Moments of Rising Mist


(Sung Landscape Poetry [CE 960-1127] translated by Amitendranath Tagore))


Mei Yao-ch’en - A Walk on Lu-shan Mountain


My longing for wilderness is satisfied.

Mountains all around, high and low.

There is variety in these wonderful peaks:

I walk alone and lose myself in the dark path.

Hoar frost falls and bears climb the trees.

An empty wood; deer drink from the stream.

Where do the people dwell?

A cock crows once from beyond the clouds. 


Ou-yang Hsiu - Climbing the Center Peak of T’ai-shih Mountain


I tether my horse in the shadow of green pines:

In my straw sandals I walk along the green cliff.

Startled birds stir the forest flowers;

Empty hills echo the human voice.

Glow of clouds penetrating the dark mist

Is beyond my power to capture.


Su Shih - Climbing Yum-lung Mountain


Drunk, I walk along the Huang-mao cliff;

The whole cliff is strewn with boulders like flocks of sheep.

I scramble to the edge of the cliff by the stone seat;

Looking up I see white clouds filling the sky.

The sound of songs fall into the ravine, the autumn wind blows sharply.

The men on the path lift their heads and look towards the southeast;

Boisterous Shih-chun claps his hands and laughs loudly.


Su Ch’e - Huo-jan Pavilion


The city is in the south, the mountains in the north;

Every time I come here my spirit expands.

Blue tiles on a thousand houses freshly washed in rain;

Green pines in myriad gullies, fog just rising.

Throughout autumn I was ill in bed,

Listening to the sound of axes.

Today we ascend to the pavilion carrying our wine;

I request all of you to compose beautiful verses.

Allow me first to write this poem on the pavilion wall.


Sunday, November 21, 2021

1076. Dream Song 14 - John Berryman

Life, friends, is boring. We must not say so.

After all, the sky flashes, the great sea yearns,

we ourselves flash and yearn,

and moreover my mother told me as a boy

(repeatingly) ‘Ever to confess you’re bored

means you have no


Inner Resources.’ I conclude now I have no

inner resources, because I am heavy bored.

People bore me,

literature bores me, especially great literature,

Henry bores me, with his plights & gripes

as bad as achilles,


who loves people and valiant art, which bores me.

And the tranquil hills, & gin, look like a drag

and somehow a dog

has taken itself & its tail considerably away

into mountains or sea or sky, leaving

behind: me: wag.

Saturday, October 23, 2021

1075. Incantation - Czeslaw Milosz

Translated from the Polish by Czeslaw Milosz and Robert Pinsky


Human reason is beautiful and invincible.

No bars, no barbed wire, no pulping of books,

No sentence of banishment can prevail against it.

It establishes the universal ideas in language,

And guides our hand so we write Truth and Justice

With capital letters, lie and oppression with small.

It puts what should be above things as they are,

Is an enemy of despair and friend of hope.

It does not know Jew from Greek or slave from master.

Giving us the estate of the world to manage.

It says that everything is new under the sun,

Opens the congealed fist of the past.

Beautiful and very young are Philo-Sophia

And poetry, her ally in the service of the good.

As late as yesterday Nature celebrated their birth,

The news was brought to the mountains by a unicorn and an echo.

Their friendship will be glorious, their time has no limit.

Their enemies have delivered themselves to destruction.


Saturday, October 16, 2021

1074. Singing Everything - Joy Harjo

Once there were songs for everything,

Songs for planting, for growing, for harvesting,
For eating, getting drunk, falling asleep,
For sunrise, birth, mind-break, and war.
For death (those are the heaviest songs and they
Have to be pried from the earth with shovels of grief)
Now all we hear are falling-in-love songs and 
Falling apart after falling in love songs.
The earth is leaning sideways
And a song is emerging from the floods
And fires. Urgent tendrils lift toward the sun.
You must be friends with silence to hear.
The songs of the guardians of silence are the most powerful----
They are the most rare.


Wednesday, September 08, 2021

1073. Famous - Naomi Shihab Nye



The river is famous to the fish. 

The loud voice is famous to silence,
which knew it would inherit the earth
before anybody said so.

The cat sleeping on the fence is famous to the birds
watching him from the birdhouse.

The tear is famous, briefly, to the cheek.
The idea you carry close to your bosom
is famous to your bosom.

The boot is famous to the earth,
more famous than the dress shoe,
which is famous only to floors.

The bent photograph is famous to the one who carries it
and not at all famous to the one who is pictured.

I want to be famous to shuffling men
who smile while crossing streets,
sticky children in grocery lines,
famous as the one who smiled back.

I want to be famous in the way a pulley is famous,
or a buttonhole, not because it did anything spectacular,
but because it never forgot what it could do.

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

1072. Theme For English B - Langston Hughes

The instructor said,  


Go home and write

a page tonight.

And let that page come out of you —

Then, it will be true.


I wonder if it’s that simple?

I am twenty-two, colored, born in Winston-Salem.

I went to school there, then Durham, then here

to this college on the hill above Harlem,

I am the only colored student in my class.

The steps from the hill lead down into Harlem,

through a park, then I cross St. Nicholas

Eighth Avenue, Seventh, and I come to the Y,

the Harlem Branch Y, where I take the elevator

up to my room, sit down, and write this page:


It’s not easy to now what is true for you or me

at twenty-two, my age. But I guess I’m what

I feel and see and hear, Harlem, I hear you:

Hear you, hear me—we two—you, me, talk on this page.

(I hear New York, too.) Me—Who?

Well, I like to eat, sleep, drink, and be in love.

I like to work, read, learn, and understand life.

I like a pipe for a Christmas present,

or records—Bessie, bop, or Bach.


I guess being colored doesn’t make me not like

the same things other folks like who are other races.

so will my page be colored that I write?

Being me, it will not be white.

But will be 

a part of you, instructor.

You are white—

yet a part of me, as I am a part of you.

That’s American.

Sometimes perhaps you don’t want to a part of me.

Nor do I often want to be a part of you.

But we are, that’s true!

I guess you learn from me—

although you’re older—and white—

and somewhat more free.  


This is my page for English B.


Wednesday, July 28, 2021

1071. Morning Birds - Tomas Tranströmer

 Translated from the Swedish by Gunnar Harding and Frederic Will

I wake my car.

Its windshield is covered with pollen.

I put on my sunglasses

and the song of the birds darkens.


While another man buys a newspaper

in the railroad station

near a large goods wagon

which is entirely red with rust

and stands flickering in the sun.


No emptiness anywhere here.


Straight across the spring warmth a cold corridor

where someone comes hurrying

to say that they are slandering him

all the way up to the Director.


Through a backdoor in the landscape

comes the magpie

black and white, Hel’s bird.

And the blackbird moving crisscross

until everything becomes a charcoal drawing,

except for the white sheets on the clothesline:

a Palestrina choir.


No emptiness anywhere here.


Fantastic to feel how my poem grows

while I myself shrink.

It is growing, it takes my place.

It pushes me out of its way.

It throws me out of the nest.

The poem is ready.


Tuesday, July 27, 2021

1070. From The Journals Of The Frog Prince - Susan Mitchell

 In March I dreamed of mud,

sheets of mud over the ballroom chairs and table.

rainbow slicks of mud under the throne.

In April I saw mud of clouds and mud of sun.

Now in May I find excuses to linger in the kitchen

for wafts of silt and ale,

cinnamon and river bottom,

tender scallion and sour underlog.


At night I cannot sleep.

I am listening for the dribble of mud

climbing the stairs to our bedroom

as if a child in a wet bathing suit ran

up them in the dark.


Last night I said, “Face it, you’re bored.

How many times can you live over

with the same excitement

that moment when the princess leans

into the well, her face a petal

falling to the surface of the water

as you rise like a bubble to her lips,

the golden ball bursting from your mouth?”

Remember how she hurled you against the wall,

your body cracking open,

skin shriveling to the bone,

the green pod of your heart splitting in two,

and her face imprinted with every moment

of your transformation?


I no longer tremble.


Night after night I lie beside her.

“Why is your forehead so cool and damp?” she asks.

Her breasts are soft and dry as flour.

The hand that brushes my head is feverish.

At her touch I long for wet leaves,

the slap of water against rocks.


“What are you thinking of” she asks.

How can I tell her

I am thinking the green skin

shoved like wet pants behind the Directoire desk?

Or tell her I am mortgaged to the hilt

of my sword, io the leek-green tip of my soul?

Someday I will drag her by her hair

to the river—and what? Drown her?

Show her the green flame of my self rising at her feet?

But here’s no more violence in her

than in a fence or a gate.


“What are you thinking of?” she whispers.

I am staring into the garden.

I am watching the moon

wind its trail of golden slime around the oak,

over the stone basin of the fountain.

How can I tell her

I am thinking that transformations are not forever?


1069. Bring Me The Sunflower - Eugenio Montale

Translated from the Italian by George Kay

Bring me the sunflower for me to transplant

to my own ground burnt by the spray of sea,

and show all day to the imaging blues

of sky that golden-faced anxiety.


Things hid in darkness lean towards the clear,

bodies consume themselves in a flowing

of shades: and they in varied music—showing

the chance of chances is to disappear.


So bring me the plant that takes you right

where the blond hazes shimmering rise

and life fumes to air as spirit does;

bring me the sunflower crazy with the light.


Thursday, July 22, 2021

1068. The Promise We Live By - Simon J. Ortiz



On the West Coast, days of rainstorm wrestle
the Coast Range, their wet fury driven landward.
We never quite know what the sky promises,
and there is certain assurance in that fate.
It is for that we wait. We’ve already weathered
more than promises. They’ve passed us by.
So I’m not sure this morning when I step outside,
and suddenly it’s not winter anymore but some
warm mask that molds the contours of my face
with unbidden warmth. It’s almost unnatural
but I hope not, having already found reliable
the promise of loss. My expectation is unfulfilled.



Somewhere within the universe of the prairie hills
is a climate that is yet unnoticed, and from it
is welling a warm rupture of another sure season.
Believe it is not unusual, I urge myself
whose myths are always changing in the light.
So it’s this we arrive into daily, always
another season, warm or frigid, and it’s we
who wage weather within our furious spirits.



Tomorrow’s dawn is a promise that will fulfill.
Never mind if the sky does not quite agre

1067. Autobiographia Literaria - Frank O'Hara

 When I was a child

I played by myself in a

corner of the schoolyard

all alone.


I hated dolls and I

hated games, animals were

not friendly and birds

flew away.


If anyone was looking

for me I hid behind a

tree and cried out “I am

an Orphan.”


And here I am, the

center of all beauty!

writing these poems!

Imagine!

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

1066. Ode To Thaliarchus - Horace


Translated from the Latin by David Ferry


See Mount Soracte shining in the snow.

See how the laboring overladen trees

Can scarcely bear their burdens any longer.


See how the streams are frozen in the cold.

Bring in the wood and light the fire and open

The fourth-year vintage wine in the Sabine jars,


O Thaliarchus, as for everything else,

Forget tomorrow. Leave it up to the gods.

Once the gods have decided, the winds at sea


Will quiet down, and the sea will quiet down,

And these cypresses and old ash trees will shake

In the storm no longer. Take everything as it comes.


Put down your books for profit every new day

That Fortune allows you to have. While you’re still young,

And while morose old age is far away,


There’s love, there are parties, there’s dancing and there’s music,

There are young people out in the city squares together

As evening comes on, there are whispers of lovers, there’s laughter.

Thursday, June 17, 2021

1065. Emily Dickinson at the Poetry Slam - Dan Vera

I will tell you why she rarely ventured from her house.
It happened like this:

One day she took the train to Boston,
made her way to the darkened room,
put her name down in cursive script
and waited her turn.

When they read her name aloud
she made her way to the stage
straightened the papers in her hands —
pages and envelopes, the backs of grocery bills,
she closed her eyes for a minute,
took a breath,
and began.

From her mouth perfect words exploded,
intact formulas of light and darkness.
She dared to rhyme with words like cochineal
and described the skies like diadem.
Obscurely worded incantations filled the room
with an alchemy that made the very molecules quake.

The solitary words she handled
in her upstairs room with keen precision
came rumbling out to make the electric lights flicker.

40 members of the audience
were treated for hypertension.
20 year old dark haired beauties found their heads
had turned a Moses White.

Her second poem erased the memory of every cellphone
in the nightclub,
and by the fourth line of the sixth verse
the grandmother in the upstairs apartment
had been cured of her rheumatism.

The papers reported the power outages.
The area howpitals tazed their emergency generators
and sirens were heard to wail through the night.

Quietly she made her way to the exit,
walked to the terminal and rode back to Amherst

She naver left her room again
and never read such syllables aloud.

Saturday, May 29, 2021

1064. Such Grace - James Laughlin


is in her step     such grace

goes in the movement of her


arms & shoulders as she walks

such grace in how she holds


her head     how graceful the

gestures of her hands     such


grace in the way she slightly

tilts her face toward me when


a smile is beginning there

and float in air of a dan-cer 

   

suspended flight of a

hummingbird     always she goes


in grace     there is such

grace in all her going.

Sunday, May 02, 2021

1063. For Earth's Grandsons - Joy Harjo

Stand tall, no matter your heights, how dark your skin

Your spirit is all colors within

You are made of the finest woven light

From the iridescent love that formed your mothers, fathers

Your grandparents all the way back on the spiral road----

There is no end to this love

It has formed your bodies

Feeds your bright spirits

And no metter what happens in these times of breaking----

No matter dictators, the heartless, and liars

No matter----you are born of those

Who kept ceremonial embers burning in their hands

All through the miles of relntless exile

Those who sang the path through massacre

All the way to sunrise

You will make it through----




Sunday, April 04, 2021

1062. Becoming Human - Simon J. Ortiz

We are given permission
by the responsibility we accept
and carry out. Nothing more,
nothing less
                        People are not born.
They are made when they become
human beings within ritual,
tradition, purpose, responsibility.

Therefore, as humans, this we do:
sun Father begins red
in the east.
Stand and be humble.
Red through trees,
moments changing each instant
into the next change,
each change tied to the next.
To be human is to have
a sense of being within self

Son, Red. Trees.
Our hearts' eyes seeing
inward and outward, accepting:
Stand and be humble.

The more names you have the more of a person you become.
That's what I've heard. I was telling Tom yesterday afternoon.
Values, education, social change, cultural corruption, what is and what isn't.
I have to dispute him at moments.
I tell him, the knowledge we derive from the education we get is our own.
Knowledge is determined by our cultural, spiritual, linguistic, political environment.
The knowledge from the community and context here cannot be anything but the people's own.
This is not Chicage, St. Louis, Dallas, or Rapid City. This is Rosebud, the Lakota homeland.

Our names are both Indian and American.
We have so many names now we don't know them all.
In a sense, we have become more of a people than ever before.

1061. Museum Piece - Richard Wilbur

The good gray guardians of art
Patrol the halls on spongy shoes
Impartially protetive though
Perhaps suspicious of Toulouse. 

Here dozes one against the wall
Disposed upon a funeral chair.
A Degas dancer pirouettes
Upon the parting of his hair.

See how she spins! The grace is there,
But strain as well is plain to see.
Degas loved the two together.
Beauty joined to energy.

Edgar Degas purchased once
A fine El Greco, which he kept
Against the wall beside his bed
To hang his pants on while he slept.

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

1060. This Is Not A Poem - Joyce Carol Oates

in which the poet discovers
delicate white-parched bones
of a small creature
on a Great Lake shore
or the desiccated remains
of cruder roadkill
beside the rushing highway.

Nor is it a poem in which
a cracked mirror yields
a startled face,
or sere grasses hissing
like consonants
in a foreign language.
Family photo album
filled with yearning
strangers long deceased,
closet of beautiful
clothes of the dead.
Attic trunk, stone well,
or metonymic moon
time-travelling for wisdom
in the Paleolithic
age, in the Middle Kingdom
or Genesis
or the time of Basho. . . . 
Instead it is a slew
of words in search
of a container 
a sleek green stalk,
a transparent lung,
a single hair's curl,
a cooing of vowels
like doves.

Monday, January 04, 2021

1059. Abbott's Lagoon - Robert Hass

.

The first thing that is apt to raise your eyes

Above the dove-grey and silvery thickets

Of lupine and coyote bush and artichoke thistle

On the sandy, winding path from the parking lot

To the beach at Abbott’s Lagoon is the white flash

Of the marsh hawk’s rump as it skims low

Over the coastal scrub. White-crowned sparrows,

Loud in the lupine even in October, even

In the drizzly rain, startle and disappear.

The brush rabbits freeze, then bolt and disappear,

And the burbling songs and clucks of the quail

That you may not even have noticed you were noticing

Go mute and you are there in October and the rain,

And the hawk soars past, first hawk, then shadow

Of a hawk, not much shadow in the rain, low sun

Silvering through clouds a little to the west.

It’s almost sundown. And this is the new weather

At the beginning of the middle of the California fall

When a rain puts an end to the long sweet days

Of our September when the skies are clear, days mild,

and the roots of the plants have gripped down

Into the five-or six-month drought, have licked

All the moisture they are going to lick

From the summer fogs, and it is very good to be walking

Because you can almost hear the earth sigh

As it sucks up the rain, here where mid-October

Is the beginning of winter which is the beginning

Of a spring greening, as if the sound you are hearing

Is spring and winter lying down in one another’s arms

Under the hawk’s shadow among the coastal scrub,

Ocean in the distance and the faintest sound of surf

and a few egrets, bright whits, working the reeds

At the water’s edge in October in the rain.