Awash on a Southern Shore
Friday, January 27, 2012

More random black and white photos this week, beginning with a picture of me several years ago by Medina Lake (now three-quarters dry because of drought) in San Antonio, then pictures from a drive around East Texas, through the woods then returning through Galveston and along the coast mostly blown away by a hurricane about a month after I passed through, then a picture of my son four or five years ago, then back to San Antonio countryside,then a big jump to New Mexico, ending with another picture of me atop Mesa Verde from a couple of years after the picture at Lake Medina. All this sequential from my image file.
My poems this week, in addition to the usual great poets from my library, include my new poems from last week as I tried to reintroduce myself to poetry after thirty days of prose-writing and older poems about Corpus Christi on the Texas mid-coast where we lived for fifteen years.
Here's the line-up for the week.
Me flying
Federico Garcia Lorca Little Girl Drowned in the Well Waltz in the Branches
Me Watching the Lexington Brought to Final Berth (Corpus Christi series)
Daisy Zamora Razed Earth Beloved Voices Cat Another Time
Me poppity-pop
Alexander Shurbanov Touch Lullaby Cats Risk
Me Windsurfers (Corpus Christi series)
Gabriel Gomez 20 Retablos
Me the woman weeps
Star Black Lust The Blank Abandon of Beds Personals
Me Baby Stuff (Corpus Christi series)
W. S. Merwin Song of Man Chipping an Arrowhead The Day The Chase
Me the moon rising (Corpus Christi series)
Gregory Orr In the House of Orphans Elegy Who’d Want to be a Man
Me lying with my lover on the beach at midnight (Corpus Christi series)
Lorna Dee Cervantes Cannery Town in August The Anthill
Me guardian of my better angels
Miguel Hernandez The Train of the Wounded
Me The Apartment on Santa Fe (Corpus Christi series)
Michael Ryan This is a Poem for the Dead
Me winter waits
W. S. Merwin Cargo Going The Curlew
Me Harbor Bridge (Corpus Christi series)
John Ashbery Ignorance of the Law is no Excuse O Fortuna
Me When Winter Finally Came (Corpus Christi series)

My first reaction to writing poetry was a sense of freedom, poetry, at least the way I write it, being much less constrained than the mini-stories I had been writing.
flying
flying like birds flying where they please on a warm summer breeze
like a stray dog roaming wild in green Missouri hills
like a fiddler kicking high at the Saturday dance
that’s how free I am today…

My first two library poems this week are by Federico Garcia Lorca .
Born in 1898 in the south of Spain and shot in 1936 by anti-communists forces during the Spanish Civil War, the poet, dramatist and theatre director, one of too many artists murdered by the forces of oppression around the world.
The poems are from his book Poet in New York, published in its 8th edition by Noonday Press in 1995. It is a bilingual book, Lorca's original Spanish and translation by Greg Simon on facing pages.
There's a wonderful poetic tribute to Walt Whitman in the book, as much as I'd like to use it, it is much too long for here. But I recommend it to anyone who has access to the book if they have any doubt about the influence Whitman,America's greatest poet, has had on the poetry of the western world.
Actually, as great as they all are, it's hard to find many poems in the book that aren't too long to use here.
Little Girl Drowned in the Well (Granada and Newburgh)
Statues suffer the darkness of coffins with their eyes, but they suffer even more from water that never reaches the sea... that never reaches the sea.
The townspeople ran along the battlements breaking the fishermen's poles. Quickly! To the edge! Hurry! And the tender stars sounded like bullfrogs. ...that never reaches the sea.
At peace in my memory, heavenly body, circumference, boundary, you cry on the shores of a horse's eye ...that never reaches the sea.
But no one in the darkness will be able to give you distances only sharpened limits: diamond's future. ...that never reaches the sea.
While the people look for pillowed silences, you pulsate forever, defined by your ring. ...that never reaches the sea.
You will always be ahead of some waves that accept the combat of roots and anticipated solitude. ...that never reaches the sea.
They're coming up the ramps! Arise from the water! Every point of light will toss you a chain! ...that never reaches the sea.
No, that never reaches the sea. Water fixed in one place, breathing with all its unstrung violins on the musicale scale of wounds and deserted buildings. Water that never reaches the sea!
Waltz in the Branches
One leaf fell, a second and a third. A fish swam on the moon. The water sleeps for only an hour, but the white sea sleeps for a hundred. There is a dead lady in the branch of the tree. The nun in her habit sand inside the pomegranate. This girl of mine reached the pinecone from the pine. And the pine went along to look for the tiny feather's song. But the wounded nightingale cried throughout the countryside. And I did too, because the first leaf fell, a second and a third. And a head of crystal and a paper fiddle. And the snow could make its way in the world, if the snow slept for a month, and the branches wrestled with the world, one by one, two by two and three by three. Oh, the hard ivory of invisible flesh! Oh, the dawn's abyss with no ants! With the swish of trees, with the sighs of the ladies, with the croaking frogs and the honey's yellow glug. A shadow's torso will arrive, wearing a laurel crown. For the wind, the sky will be hard as a wall and all the downed branches will leave as they dance. One by one around the moon, two by two around the sun, and three by three let the pieces of ivory sleep.

I was born and raised in South Texas, about as far south as you can get in the United States. The Rio Grande River, the border with Mexico, was about a 20 minute drive south of the house I grew up in and the beaches of the Gulf of Mexico about 45 minutes to the southeast.
Later, with my wife and son, I lived for fifteen years on the mid-gulf coast, about half way between Galveston and South Padre Island. We lived most of that time in Corpus Christi, our house about 10 blocks from Corpus Christi Bay and about 15 minutes from North Padre Island and Gulf beaches.
It is a fishing and tourist city, as well as an industrial city, with the greatest concentration of petroleum refineries on the gulf coast, using the Port of Corpus Christi to ship in crude oil from all over the world and ship out the various refined products mostly to off-shore customers.
The years we lived there were the best of my life, both professionally and personally.
I was near the cresting of a very busy career while there, and there wasn't any time for writing. It wasn't until nearly ten years later that I started to write again. But there was a lot of material for a writer in those years, material I began to use when I returned to writing.
I'm using some of those poems this week, beginning with this one, an account of the arrival of the aircraft Lexington being brought to dock along the city's shoreline as a tourist attraction. The poem was written early in 2000 and was published in The Green Tricycle later that year.
Watching the Lexington Brought to Final Berth
Though small for her class, she dwarfed the tugs that surrounded her, three to each side to keep her on course and two astern to push her to her final berth between the art museum and the state aquarium. Stormy weather and the limited maneuverability of her dependent condition made the narrow passage at Port Aransas risky, so she had been held in the gulf for several days, her last days in the open sea. On this day, under a sky blown cloudless by the strong winds that sweep the Texas coast, thousands of people waited to greet her, cheering her at first sight on the horizon, wondering at her size as she drew closer. She was massive, bigger than they had imagined, like a city block of buildings painted navy gray, afloat in the choppy bay, pushed through the waves by tug boats that reached barely midway up her hull. Delicately, she was turned by the tugs, then pushed stern first into the sandy cradle made to hold her safe, not breached, yet not at sea, alive and whole, she was resting, resting, at last, off a quiet beach in Texas.

My next poems from my poetry library are by Daisy Zamora.
Zamora, born in 1950 in Managua, Nicaragua, was raised in a wealthy liberal and politically active family. She attended convent schools and studied at the Universidad Centroamericana in Nicaragua where she earned a degree in psychology. She earned a post graduate diploma from INCAE, a branch of Harvard University in Central America]. She also studied at the Academia Dante Alighieri and the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes.
She was involved in the fight against the Somoza dictatorship in the 1970s, and joined the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) in 1973. She was exiled to Honduras, Panama and Costa Rica. During Nicaragua’s Sandinista Revolution, she was a combatant for the FSLN (Sandinista National Liberation Front), and became the voice and program director for clandestine Radio Sandino during the final 1979 Sandinista offensive. After the revolution was won, she was appointed vice minister of culture for the new government.
She is the author of several books widely read in Spanish and in English. She is also a translator of poetry and editor of anthologies. The poems I'm using this week are from her book Riverbed of Memory. It is a dual language book, the poet's original Spanish and translation to English by Barbara Paschke on facing pages. This Spanish/English edition was published by City Lights in 1992.
Razed Earth
The suitcase full of baby clothes I kept with such care, a little girl crossing the street in her mother's arms, or a passing glance at a pregnant woman waiting for a bus.
Any encounter / Spark / Unleashes a bonfire in this unprepared heart: dry fodder, tinder reduced to smokey ash, to razed earth.
Beloved Voices
The afternoon when you called Maria Mercedes I discovered in your voice the voice of your father whom I never knew.
There was a moment when you spoke with a voice that wasn't yours.
A voice echo of another voice that your older sister, Gladys, would remember or your mother (if she were living) would have recognized immediately
Cat
No one knows where he came from. in the morning he stretches in the sun, or we watch his silhouette undulate behind the opaque glass in the window.
Lonely like us: "a couple stuck by the arrow..." this charcoal cat who survives catching cockroaches and an occasional rat.
Another Time
We return to the place we were happy accompanied by new friends: seated face to face you hand no longer seeks mine under the table.
In the shade the tables where we once sat are empty. Midday whitens the cocoplums in the highest branches guayabas grow green among green leaves.
There's warmth between us, we look like two old friends. Tenderly, pregnant with sadness, I look at the tables and chairs, so dead and alone.

It wasn't as easy to return to poems as I had thought it might be, requiring a different mind-set from the narrative discipline of prose.
poppity-pop
getting back into the daily poetry poppity-pop frame of mind requires a step back from the maturity grind
so, time to put on our play boots and dance till the cows come flippity-flopping home
your turn to do the milking my turn to lick the cream

The next poems are by Alexander Shurbanov, from collection of his Frost-Flowers, selected and translated by Ludmilla G.Popova-Wightman and published by Ivy Press in 1992. It is a dual language book, Bulgarian and English translation on facing pages. (I learned something I didn't know - I've worked with Bulgarian speakers but never knew their language used the cyrillic alphabet, which I learned, and subsequently forgot, while studying Russian.)
I couldn't find current information about the poet that I wouldn't have to pay for. It's also complicated because there is apparently a person by the same name prominent in the film community who gets most of the Wikipedia entries.
I do have this, though, from the bio on the back cover of the book.
Shubanov, born in 1941,is a Bulgarian poet, literary critic, translator, and teacher. At the time of publication of his book, he was Chairman of the English Department at Sofia University. At that time, he had published five volumes of poetry and three books of essays and critical studies. He had also translated The Canterbury Tales, Paradise Lost, and a number of other contemporary poetry into Bulgarian.
Touch
How bravely we touch dead things from childhood on. We stretch fearless fingers toward stones, toward dry shells of clams and snails. And this touch fills our spirit with calm. But how under the hard armor; life - soft and wet - surprises us. We shudder instantly. Our instinct casts us apart. Flesh folds into itself. And we observe ourselves with fear and astonishment. Within the safe world of dead objects, life suddenly life.
Lullaby
In the evening the sea pales and falls silent, frightened by something unknown about to happen. But soon the dark universe bends a smiling face over the sea, its hair gently shrouds it. Calmed, the sea grows tranquil, begins to darken and to murmur something indistinct, placid, endless like eternity, which is nothing to fear.
Postmen
Cats exchange letters by posting them on our overcoats. A brush, a sniff - and the message is delivered. Their raised tails announce it all. They never ask permission. We think we re their masters but they use us as their postmen. Everything else cats can manager alone. They wink behind our backs, and don't think much of us.
Risk
On this shore of savage jaws and heads judiciously disappearing into hunched shoulders to sport a swan's neck - what a magnificent risk!

This is another Corpus Christi poem.
My office was downtown, within sight of the bay, and I often drove to work along the palm-divided street that bordered the bay. The poem is about a not unusual sight to see as I made my way to work.
This poem was also written and published in The Green Tricycle in 2000.
Windsurfers
This windsurfers start early in the morning, just as the rising sun comes boiling up from the bay. You can see them off the bluff at Cole Park. Their red and yellow and green sails bob and bounce like fishing corks in the waves. Behind the, the downtown skyline rises up from Water Street and, in its shadow, the marina, with masts jumping in the same choppy tide that buffets the surfers. You can see them in the orange light of the sun, their bodies leaning horizontal to the water, their backs and shoulders smashing into the foam and froth of the tossing surf as they pull on their sails, hang onto their boards, straining to harness the wind and tide for a ninety second ride, seconds stretched to last a day in the dry and wind-free world.

The next piece is by Gabriel Gomez, taken from his book The Outer Bands, published by the University of Notre Dame Press.
Gomez is a poet, playwright, and music journalist born and raised in El Paso, Texas. He received a B.A. in Creative Writing from the College of Santa Fe and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from St. Mary's College of California. He has taught English at the University of New Orleans, Tulane University, the College of Santa Fe, and the Institute of American Indian Arts.
This piece, though taken in small bites is fairly long. I've used it here before, but I like it very much so I'm using it again.
A Retablo, or lamina, is a Latin American devotional painting, especially a small popular or folk art one using iconography derived from traditional Catholic church.
20 Retablos
The red scene begins with a swift sketch A still life motivated from the instant flashing
Her hands warming in her pockets, re-balling tissue in a hard rhythm. Circling a name for her sun disturbed shadow of conch simplicity to an animated form spilling a ribbon of paths to the spearing sorghum. A final dust lifting under and after the weight of dew whispering the act of skin. Her name, I once recalled, meant unraveling in Spanish.
As with all parables there are four base colors
I learned that there is always food at th;e reckoning of a tragedy. Paint eagerly represents a woman as still life, diffused through hundreds of movements, by her painter. Put trees through a window behind her; offer a texture circling of blue shadow stir- ring in pools of tea colored sand. Her name will come in a lipped octave slope saving the impulse to point at what you mean you'll want to say.
the hands were once attached to the arms the face and legs have dropped to the imagination the legs became deeper with marble when rising toward the pinched waist
I learned to smoke behind the San Fernando church. We smoked faros that looked like joints, so we imagined that too. The church was named after a saint that had suffered patiently through a com- plicated and unreasonable death.
crops of lavender, shin height,plump with aroma smeared the tillage with a tidy summary the soil re-occurred for miles under the fashioned horizon losing its light to the opposite page
there is distance in the drowning color similitude to the shifty ochre light marching heavily upon us the ocean kept re-occurring on the beach in the form of a wave
There were several interesting horizons.
because, as children,we have thought of the sun as an onion we now remember its cells lifting from the rosy sepulcher spilling in a wave, a repetitive signal enouncing it coming to pummel the ground
The ground re-occurred through everything.
people suffer towards the page creatures pilot through a highway their language is untranslatable the road they carry is shaped with a foreign math
the sunrise is a small child the metaphor became easy to denounce once it was known that there are no small children depicted in heaven the sun became an anterior math and inconceivable exegesis
two objects clamor towards the specter
a woman squinting through the double sided mirror a woman walking separately
diffused with so much water> then hardened into form
the series returned deep swallow of of sound and saliva
brown cardigan holding balls of tissue in their pockets lifting and dropping
a pattern of gauzy shadows spilled from the giant red trees
the fragrant moment of thirst
a curious and particular hunger you mean for me to say here enter willingly
dew huddled on the stems of lilacs
like rock candy
a murder of crows dance like behemoth electrons
Humidity advanced thrillingly to her skin. The sharp gray sheets of rain dissipating slowly over the walkways and the cloistered verandas. Then an eventual puddle found your skin and lifted small dimples on your arms and neck. Over the mass of earth is the river, which all this traffic is under with an insoluble thirst
your back was neatly paragraphed by your blouse I came around you like the movements of a flood
Doldrums jerked with fog memory kept re-occurring even from that place, where I had never been, seemed natural to transplant every place I'll call it media luna
my father kept semi precious rocks from Mexico in a lit cabinet
resurrected artifacts of other peoples lives
there was another American who had married a Mestiza woman
he raised and indefinite number of pigs with his wife
his-truck was dolphin blue

I attended a funeral last week, a sad affair for a man much too young.
the woman weeps
the woman weeps
the coffin lowered slowly into the open grave
women all around weep as well, women who have set where the weeping woman sits and women who someday will
the men watch, knowing there is a box waiting for them someday and a hole being dug a little deeper each day to contain it

Next, I have poems by Star Black. The poems are from the anthology, The KGB Bar Book of Poems, a collection of poems performed during the first three years of regular Monday night readings at New York's KGB Bar.
Black is codirector (with David Lehman) of the series. She was born in Colorado and raised in Hawaii and Washington D.C. She is a professional photographer and author of three books of poetry.
She read these poems, among others, at KGB, April 27th, 1998. The poems are from her book, Balefire, published by Painted Leaf Press in 1999.
Lust
The Sphinx blinks above the blond commotion of dust, but her eyes disinterested stone , afloat, starkly. She, too, will reach the jibbed rock's velocity, in rising throb. She was created for her death -
defeat by mammal, the mammal's swollen feet. She was created for her trick, its cleaving question. Man and beast meet in the riddle, daunted, doomed. She is monstrous on her thriving perch.
Her ears hurt: "Solve me or die, warrior of Thebes. I am Nietzschean. I am destiny." In a matter of minutes, she was gone, a simple Simon hurled toward stone, a lioness exposed in emperor's clothes, easy,
until Nietzsche reversed the roles, and cleaving armies attained the claw's perch: no more on-to-one.
The Blank Abandon of Birds
Esperance! The twinge of moonlight in outer space, its circulating tea cups of planets, the floury face no long inscrutable in a half-frown but full and voluble, agape. We are about to land upon a nostril.
There are no hulas here, simply dissolving patter on silver silt in gravity's void, our heads abubble with the merest molecules aswirl within. Our Velcro fingers web and clench, we hover upon the lonely
homestead, its unembarrassed crud silhouette, its entombing gradients. See the silt's dissolution of nationalities, how ever booted imprint fits, how clean this map is, without Clio's grievances.
Personals
Approximate and unfulfilled, a devilish nymph in the underworld seeks huge black swam for fiery twills in cranium's caverns, gray-matter indifference preferred, although will take sensitivity, as well,
if inexperience in hell is available, for long-term committed one-flight stand with ensuing consequences such as bestial transformations and showering soot. Nymph will attempt to run, as required, from
dark thwunking destiny. Nymph will not be easy to acquire, though promised to succumb to aerial fury. Various disguises necessary, drop chute appreciated.
Do not send photograph, please; visuals confusing, elements of surprise essential, fact of advertisement accidental. Pretend you don't read and never will.

This next poem, written in 1999, was published, also in The Green Tricycle, in 2000.
The poem recounts a life-changing event only days after the second time we moved to the city.
Baby Stuff
I remember the day, late March, early spring, sunshine and a sky scrubbed blue by a brisk bay breeze. Our families came from all directions, arriving in a rush at the last minute, everything unplanned and unexpected. We had been called only the day before, barely a week after that told us to expect a wait of six months to a year. then the phone call at mid-afternoon, he'll be ready at noon tomorrow, they said, and he'll come with only the diaper he wears. Unprepared, we panicked, rushing to K-Mart, pushing a squeaky cart from aisle to aisle. "What does a baby need," we asked each other. Bottles, a bottle-warmer, diapers, oh Lord... What else? Clothes, bassinet, a stroller... No, that's later. A car seat... Oh Lord, oh Lord, what else? We fell together in the middle of the baby-stuff section,. holding onto each other, laughing.

Here are three poems by W. S. Merwin from the May, 1972 issue of Poetry.
Song of a Man Chipping an Arrowhead
Little children you will all go but the one you are hiding will fly
The Day
If you could take the day by the hand even now and say Come Father calling it by your own name it might rise in its blindness with all its knuckles and curtain and open the eyes it was born with
The Chase
On the first day of Ruin a crack appears running
then what do they know to do they shout Thief Thief and run after
like cracks converging across a wall
they strike at it they pick it up by tails they throw pieces into the air where the pieces join hands join feet run on
through the first day
while the wren sings and sings

I wrote this next Corpus Christi poem in 2002, then used it in 2005 in my first book, Seven Beats a Second
the moon rising
ripples of wind ruffle bay waters like a lover's hand soothing soft tangles in her beloved's hair
gentle winds
quiet waters
bright stars warm in the cool autumn dark
the moon, rising, empress of the night

Next, here are three poems by Gregory Orr, from his book, City of Salt. The book was published by the University of Pittsbugh Press in 1995.
Orr, the author of numerous volumes of poetry as well as a memoir, was born in Albany, New York in 1947 and grew up in the rural Hudson Valley, and for a year, in a hospital in the hinterlands of Haiti. He received a BA degree from Antioch College, and an MFA from Columbia University.
He teaches at the University of Virginia, where he founded the MFA Program in Writing in 1975, and served from 1978 to 2003 as Poetry Editor of the Virginia Quarterly Review.
n the House of Orphans
Their father gone since dawn, the four of them sit at breakfast. The older smokes. They eat their toast and jam. Soon the school bus will take them from this dark house; then, in the afternoon it will bring them back again.
Elegy
Here are consoling pieties like a tightly packed warehouse of mortuary statues through which you must elbow a path.
Here are sparrows on a porch sorting sand from seed with their beaks.
Here's the hour that has forgotten the minute though the minnow remembers teh stream.
Here are the roots in one world and the blossom in the other.
Who'd Want to be a Man
With his heart a black sack in which a small animal's trapped.
With his grief like a knot tied at birth, balled up and hard.
With his rage that smashes the ten thousand things without blinking.
With his mind like a tree on a cliff - its roots, fists clutching stone.
With his longing that's a dry well and where is the rain?

Although I spent a good part of my life within a stone's throw of a beach, the typical summer beach scene has not, since I was about ten years old, appealed to me. My time for the beach is in the winter when you have it all to yourself, and, as in this poem, at night.
This is another poem published by The Green Tricycle, this one in 2001. The journal was very good to me when I first returned to writing in 1999.
lying with my lover on the beach at midnight
the beach was best at midnight, when the daytrippers were at home nursing sunburns, or in a bar honky-tonk dancing in gritty flip-flops
the beach was best at midnight when its beauty was ours alone, when its sand gleamed in white moonlight and stars spread across the gulf sky, a blanket of light across the bed of soft tropic night; when the surf, braking against the shore in ordered rows, was the only sound in the airy silence
the beach was best at midnight, when we lay together on a sandy towel, enveloped in the starlit whisper of the rising, falling waves

Next, two poems by Lorna Dee Cervantes, from her book Emplumada, published by the University of Pittsburgh Press in 1981.
Cervantes, born in San Francisco in 1954, is an award-winning Native American (Chumash), feminist, activist poet who is considered one of the major Chicana poets of the past 40 years. She grew up in San Jose, speaking English exclusively. This was strictly enforced by her parents, who allowed only English to be spoken at home by her and her brother, hoping to avoid the racism that was occurring in her community at that time.
She was an associate professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder until 2007.
Cannery Town in August
All night it humps the air. Speechless, the steam rises from the cannery columns. I hear the night bird rave about work or lunch, or sing the swing shift home. I listen, while bodyless uniforms and spinach specked shoes drift in monochrome down the dark moon-possessed streets. Women who smell of whiskey and tomatoes, peach fuzz reddening their lips and eyes - I imagine them not speaking , dumbed buy the can's clamor and drop to the trucks that wait, grunting in their headlights below. They spotlight those who walk like a dream, with no one waiting in the shadows to palm them back to living.
The Anthill
My palm cupped her mouth As I kissed her, the flesh Of my hand between us. After school, we'd cross The fields of wild mustard To the anthills, to the Queen HIding in the dank recesses. After school, my friend's throat Ringed with daisies,so pale And like me;I couldn't stand it - All those bodies,moving And army of soldiers who had it In for me. I could taste Our salt. They could smell it, Thousands of them, defending Their missals as we kicked in The nests to find her, and recover The soft white packets Of her young.

I wrote this next, very sentimental, piece after reading a story in the newspaper.
guardian of my better angel
I read yesterday that a famous soap opera actor who I had never heard of - hardly unusual because I seldom watch tv and never watch soap operas - anyway, this famous soap opera actor I never heard of killed himself in a fit of grief after having to put his dog down
now, people who have never bonded with a dog will never understand this, people who have never experienced the deep emotional and intellectual and spiritual ties between man and such a faithful companion will think, what a stupid man, this famous soap actor I never heard of must have been
and I suppose if I were one of those emotional, spiritually, and intellectual stunted through lack of the best friend every dog wants to be, then, i suppose I might find it stupid as well
in fact, I admit it, even blessed as I am with my dear Reba, I think it’s stupid too
but I understand it
it reminds me of a poem the actor Jimmy Stewart once wrote and performed on the Johnny Carson show many years ago
it was about his dog, recently deceased, a long time companion to both him and his wife, and the loss of this dog, as he wrote it, was as deep and wrenching as would be the lose of any of his human friends
it was beautiful, as beautiful and deep as any love poem ever written, misting my eyes as he read it, a most rare event
I later bought a book of Jimmy Stewart’s poetry that included this poem, which, as it turned out, was the only good poem in the book
(though I admit the poem was not harmed in any way by Mr. Stewart’s reading)
it all reminds me of the faithful presence and bond I share with Reba, my dog, the gentlest and most loving of all the creatures that roam our earth - very old, deaf, arthritic and mostly blind, yet eager to please, to be close, to comfort and sustain my low moments and celebrate with me the times when they are good
if I were writing this at home, she would be lying beside me now, asleep, yet intent on ever key stroke, her ears twitching with every swish of my hand as I move my mouse, rising to gently lay her gray bewhiskered muzzle on my leg, brown eyes, cloudy now, but still deep as she engages my own eyes if she senses i am troubled
(and she senses everything that passes through my mind, reads my mind and, if her joints allow, be were ever I think of going before I get there)
she is the angel of my better nature and I know someday, even someday soon, she will not be beside me and it may be I who, like the famous soap opera actor I never heard of, has to deliver her to her inevitable end
and, though I will not kill myself or even write a poem as touching as Jimmy Stewarts, I know a part of me will be hollowed with loss as I am left, wandering in the shadow of a secret despair, some part of me lost without her, my better nature's gentle guardian

The next poem is by Miguel Hernandez and it's taken from the anthology, Introduction to Spanish Poetry, one of a dual-language series published by Dover Publications in 1965.
Hernandez was born in 1910 and died in 1942 from consumption and lack of proper care in a prison where he had been confined since the end of the Spanish Civil War. Born poor, then self-educated, he became a leading poet of the revolution.
The original Spanish is included in the book, with English translation of the facing page. No translators are credited.
The Train of the Wounded
Silence shipwrecked in the silence of the mouths closed at night. It does not cease to be silent or to traverse it. It speaks the drowned language of the dead. Silence.
It opens roads of deep cotton, gags the wheels of the watchers, stops the voice of the ocean, of the dove: it stirs with emotion the night of dreams. Silence.
The rainy train of flowing blood, the fragile train of the bleeding, the silent, painful, pallid train, the hushed train of suffering. Silence.
The Train of the mounting mortal pallor: the pallor coating the heads, the cry of pain, the voice, the heart, the ground, the hearts of the badly wounded. Silence.
They are spilling out legs, arms, eyes - they are spilling out fragments all over the train. They pass, leaving a wake of bitterness, a second Milky Way of starry limbs. Silence.
A hoarse, faltering, reddened train: a coal is dying, the smoke sight, and the engine sighs like a mother and pushes forward like a long dejection. Silence.
This long mother would like to stop in a tunnel and lie down to sob. There are no stations to stop at, except in the hospital or the heart.
To live, a fragment is enough: a man can squeeze into a corner of flesh. A single finger, a single piece of wing can support the total flight of the entire body. Silence.
Stop the dying train that never ceases to cross the night.
and even teh horse remains unshod, and sand gets into its hoofs and breath.

We first moved to Corpus Christi about a month before we were married (35 years ago next month, finding an older apartment within walking distance of the bay.
This poem, written in 2001, was published in The Horsethief's Journal, another publication good to me early on, in the summer of that year.
The Apartment on Santa Fe
The apartment on Santa Fe Street was our first home, a second floor loft where we learned to live together, entwined in the rhythms of bay tides and lunar cycles. We could see the bay from out bedroom window, beyond the white oleanders that lined the street and across a grassy swale that ran full with rainwater during the squalls that cross the coast on summer evenings, when the stored heat of the coastal plain rises up to meet the dripping clouds of cool gulf air. We could watch the storms as the pushed across the bay, rows of whitecaps racing toward the shore, splashing against the seawall, throwing salt water foam to the wind. Drops of water as big as marbles would pelt the window and pound the ground below us and the roof over our head, while lightning split the clouds and thunder shook the floor. Then, as quickly as they came, the storms would pass and all would be quiet and still. Birds would preen, shake their feathers and sing again. and a rainbow would form, stretching across the crescent bay like a colored ribbon around the end of the day.

The next poem by Michael Ryan. It was taken from his collection New and Selected Poems published by Houghton Mifflin in 2004.
Ryan, born in St. Louis in 1946, has been teaching creative writing and literature at University of California, Irvine since 1990.
He taught previously at the University of Iowa, Princeton University, the University of Virginia, and in the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. He is also a contributing editor at The Alaska Quarterly Review.
He has written four books of poems, an autobiography, a memoir, and a collection of essays about poetry and writing.
This is a Poem for the Dead
fathers: naked, you stand for their big faces, mouths stuffed flat, eyes weighted, your miserable dick sticking out like a nose. Dressed, you're more of a mother making dinner: those old dirt bags. the lungs , sway inside your chest like tits in a housedress. Perhaps you're frying liver that shrinks like your father getting older. You still smell him breathing all over your skin. He drank himself to death.
Now each woman you meet is a giant. You'd crawl up their legs and never come down. Even when you think you're big enough to touch them, his voice flies from inside your throat and "I love you" comes out a drunk whimper. All you can do is breathe louder. You're speaking out of his mouth. Finally you admit you know nothing about sex and drown the urge slowly like a fat bird in oil.
Still,those wings inside you. At the hot stove all day you find yourself rising, the kids wrapping themselves around your legs oh it's sexual this nourishing food for the family you father stumbling through the door calling you Honey I'm home.

Winter enters its last phase and we haven't seen much of it yet.
winter waits
February just a trip and a fall away and no winter yet
oh, we’ve had some chilly nights all right and one or two almost-cold days. but of the sharp cut of winter we’ve seen no sign
well, sure, the leaves let loose their hold on the branches of drought-burnt trees, but it was habit only, their sap fooled by the genetic history of their kind into believing that, the required number of moon-cycles being complete, it was time to head for the warm moist of their below-ground roots
saps to history
unnoticed by them, the refusal of mountain frost to leave its crested home for the lower regions where trees wait, naked, bare branches like lovers’ arms extended - sap sleeping soft and warm at the root, all above unrequited
frost lying in snowy crags, lying in wait for an early spring budding when well -slept sap begins to rise, bringing early buds to bloom
then, at last, the canny, coldest, winter winds will pounce - nature making the fool of nature and us as well

Here are three more poems by W. S. Merwin, these from his own book, The Shadow of Sirius. The book was published in 2008 by Copper Canyon Press.
Cargo
The moment at evening when the pictures set sail from the walls with their lights out unmooring without hesitation or stars they carry no questions as the unseen sails the beginning and the end wing and wing bear them out beyond the faces each set in its instant and beyond the landscape of other times and the tables piled with fruit just picked and with motionless animals all together known in the light as still lives they sail on the sound of night bearing with them the life they have been trying to show from dawn until dark
Going
ONly humans believe there is a word for goodbye we have on in every language one of the first words we learn it is made out of greeting but they are going away the raised hand waving the face the person the place the animal the day leaving the word behind and what it was meant to say
The Curlew
When the moon has gone I fly on alone into this night where I have never been
the eggshell of dark before and after in its height I am older and younger
than all that I have come to and beheld and carry still untouched across the cold

The main part of Corpus Christi is separated from its North Beach area by the Harbor Bridge, sufficiently high to allow passage of the largest tankers and freighters.
This poem also appeared in The Horsethief's Journal in 2001, in the same issue as the previous poem.
Harbor Bridge
As you cross the high, arched crest of Harbor Bridge before sundown, the city is stretched before you in lines of light flickering through the humid air of the dark Texas night. On one side, the soft swells of Corpus Christi Bay lie in darkness, broken, in the distance by the lights of Aransas Pass, faintly shining, like ghosts of shipwrecked Spanish sailors buried with their golden ships beneath the island's silver sands. On the other side, chainlink fences and bright security lights dot the port like cages of high intensity glare, reflecting off the water and the dark hulls berthed along the channel. Alongside the port, refinery row hugs the river's soft turns, a glittering crown with thousands of white lights that follow the tangle of twisting pipes, lights that climb the fiery stacks reaching into the sky with fingers of red and blue flame.
Straight ahead, the city unfolds in a river of light,a luminous flow pouring from the tops of bayfront hotels, through the downtown street, along the crowded seawall, across the marina and the quiet waters of the protected inner bay, then south,like gleaming bubbles in a moving tide, along the tree-lined curve of the shoreline's crescent arc. Streetlights, porch lights and the moving lights of cars, drifting home on suburban streets, are spread across the black horizon like fallen stars. The blue lights of Padre Island Drive, glowing like fine gulf pearls strewn in a line through the city, across Oso Bay and into the distance, and end on the far edge of sight, mixing, by the whispering gulf surf, with the yellow shine off a sub-tropic moon as reflections on pale island sand.

The last poet from my library this week is John Ashbery. I have two poems from his book Where Shall I Wander, published by HarperCollins in 2005.
Ignorance of the Law is no Excuse
We were warned about spiders, and the occasional famine. We drove downtown to see our neighbors. None of them were home. We nestled in yards the municipality had created, reminisced about other, different places - but were they? Hadn't we known it all before?
In vineyards where the bee's hymn drowns the monotony, we slept for peace, joining in the great run. He came to me. It was all as it had been, except for the weight of the present, that scuttled the pact we made with heaven. In truth there was no cause for rejoicing, nor need to turn around, either. We were lost just by standing, listening to the hum of wires overhead.
We mourned that meritocracy which, wildly vibrant, had kept food on the table and milk in the glass. In skid-row, slapdash style we walked back to the original rock crystal he had become, all concern all fears for us. We went down gently to the bottom-most step. There you can grieve and breathe, rinse your possessions in the chilly spring. Only beware the bears and wolves that frequent it and the shadow that comes when you expect dawn.
O Fortuna
Good luck! Best wishes! The best of Luck! The very best! Godspeed! God bless you! Peace be with you! May your shadow never be less! We can see through to the other side, you see. It's your problem, we know, but I can't help feeling a little envious. What if darkness became unhinged right not? Boomingly,swimmingly one remounts the current. Here is where the shade was, the suggestion of flowers, and peace, in another place.
Our competition is like tools of a certain order. No one would have found them useful at first. It wasn't until a real emergency arose, that someone had the sense to recognize for what it was. All hell didn't break loose, it was like a rising psalm materializing like snow on an unseen mountain. All that was underfoot was good, but lost.

I close with another Corpus Christi poem,this one about a historic cold spell that left ice chunks bumping into the seawall downtown.
This poem was also published in The Horsethief's Journal in 2001
When Winter Finally Came
When winter finally came, it came hard, like a great white bear from the furtherest northern night.
Cruel and ravenous it came, sweeping with cold ferocity across the Leguna Madre, swirling arctic mists over the fishing camps and salt flats and shallow inlets that run along the coast from Matagorda Island to Mansfield Bay.
It brought snow that day to deep South Texas, dusting cactus already set to bloom, coating mesquite and yellow huisache, covering the coastal prairie grasses. Cattle left on their own to graze turned their backs to the wind and huddled close in the warmth of their own steaming breath. Snakes curled tighter in their winter dens and hawks soared through the frigid air, circling, circling, watching for pre slowed by the unaccustomed cold.
In the city, salty foam splashed up by the tide froze on seawall steps, left a treacherous glaze of ice glistening green in the muted light of the overcast day. The people of the city, thin-blooded summer people not suited for such an icy day, huddled like the cattle, drinking coffee or hot chocolate,seeking warmth in the companionship of an unusual day.

That's it. All work presented here remains the property of its creators. My stuff remains available, as long as you properly credit me and "Here and Now."
I'm allen itz, owner and producer of this blog, still, as always pushing my books. The latest news in that regard is that, according to my publisher, the books are or will be also available on Kobo and Copia, whatever they are.
The rest is as per always.
Available for Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Sony eBookstore and Appple ibookstore -
"Always to the Light"

"Goes Around, Comes Around"

"Pushing Clouds Against the Wind"

And For those of a print-bent, available on Amazon
"Seven Beats a Second"
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Wishing Like Fishing Friday, January 20, 2012
Another random collection of black and white photos this week, some straight, some with a little process thrown in. Actually, I'm looking for the JPEGS for the photos I have hanging at The Foundry in response to an inquiry about them. It seems I have them in onesies and twosies scatter throughout my image files. I decided to use that search to pick up some pictures for this post.
Also, I complete my "Sonyador series" of 30 very short stories, which began two posts ago, with this post. I began the process because I felt I needed a challenge, in this case writing a story a day for 30 days. I found it to be much more difficult than the poem a day I had been doing.
I had no idea where the series would go when I wrote the first one. In fact, at that point I hadn't made the decision to make it a series rather than just 30 unrelated stories. But I liked the little boy character I created in the first story and decided to do a series centered around him. I named the boy "Sonyador" - Spanish for "dreamer." By about the third story, it came to me that "dreamer" is not just something one is, it also describes something one does. From that it came to me that the narrative would make more sense if its driven by the dreamer's dreams. With that in mind, I wrote the last story while working on the fourth, figuring out along the way each story as a movement to the end.
Anyway, it was an interesting challenge and I am very please, perhaps inordinately, but then I wasn't convinced when I started that I could write a story a day for 30 days. And they even turned out Okay.
In addition to the stories, I also have some poems from my second eBook, Goes Around,Comes Around.
And, of course, my regular posse of fine poets from my library
Here's all I have this week
I Love the Black Cat
Bitterroot Valley Nocturne
Thinking of Kierkegaard
Me
it’s a fine day today
Jose Marti
Errant Love
Me
Spider Bite (Sonyador series)
Richard Sale
Eva Mae’s Daughter
Lyrics for a Woman’s Voice
Me
admiring the dark
Mairym Cruz-Bernal
The Light of the Moon
A Taste of Irony
Black Sun”
Me
The Birds (Sonyador series)
B. H. Fairchild
Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest
Hearing Parker for the First Time
The Passing of Jesus Freaks from the College Classroom
A Starlit Night
Me
day 24,387 and counting
Kay Ryan
Flamingo Watching
Vacation
Me
Wishing Like Fishing (Sonyador series)
Margaret Randall
Left Handed
Me
habits of mercy
Rainer Maria Rilke
From The Sonnets to Orpheus
sonnets “XXI” “XXIII” “XIII” and “IX”
Me
Slip-Sliding Away (Sonyador series)
James Richardson
Northwest Passage
Classic Bar Scenes
Me
somewhere out there
Paul Muldoon
Moy Sand and Gravel
The Braggart
The Breather
An Old Pit Pony
Me
Flying (Sonyador series)
Ron Slate
Krushchev’s Foot
Me
the Hawaiian shirt plan
Me
Sasha (Sonyador series)
Me
the liberal godless socialist media will never tell you this…
Me
Even Dreams Must Someday End (Sonyador series)
I start the week with poems by Deborah Slicer. The poems are from her book The White Calf Kicks, published in 2003 by Autumn House Press.
Slicer earned a PhD and an MFA at the University of Virginia, where she was a Henry Hoyns Fellow. She taught at the University of Montana and the Hawthorne School, and currently lives near Missoula where she has been involved with the Missoula Writing Collaborative.
I Loved the Black Cat
Who stayed in the woodshed with me
During sudden summer thunderstorms late at night.
I miss the man who stayed in our house
Afraid, but I think I did not love him
So much as I loved that cat.
Darkness came undone at seams of lightning.
Black cat sat. Still.
You know how wind leaps on top of a bull pine's back, rides it nearly to the ground?
Well, cat just flared his leather nose a little,
Paws Buddha-tucked.
Watched on.
When thunder cracked it's thirty knuckles,helved its three ffree fists, when rain spat
at us -
Cat snuffed - Pfsss -
So what?
Some storms were so sudden and spectacularly
Terrible,I'd run half-dressed to the woodshed from our house,
Where I'd find my black cat
Staring down my terrible,
When the man inside the house could not.
Bitterroot Valley Nocturne
Late this afternoon Lasko's old white watchdog,neglected
for centuries, walked away from the sheep she'd been keeping.
While their muzzles were deep in hay drifts
she pressed her head against the barbed wire, as I whispered:
puppy, puppy, unmatting the frozen hair over her blue eyes,
so she could finally
close them.
And under my feet I felt the taut skin of the earth
go slack.
^^^^^^^^^^
In early winter these brittle brown foothills of the Sapphire Mountains
remind me off the little sleep scabs
I wanted to brush, gently with my middle finger,
from a friend's eyelashes as he talked about how he'd follow his estranged wife
anywhere to hold his just nursed daughter at bedtime,
the weight of her like a sack of loose pearls.
For him she is the nearest neighbor's light I look for over at Laughing,
three miles east across these blueing late-day fields,
and in white-outs when the west wind throws whole horse pastures of snow
overhead,
wishing it were young again.
^^^^^^^
At five it's nearly dark in the direction of the Sapphire Mountains.
Someone bends over our hemisphere to see that we're all right,
blocking the light,
who could it be?
Thinking of Kierkegaard
I've never told you that you talk in your sleep,
how I steal poetry from you
as you dream.
I never told you about the woman who calls each evening,
how strained her soft voice is,
that I'm writing a story
imagining your infidelity.
Your shoes are two dark holes
I would never step into,
though I might whisper into that abyss
now and then.
Trust is a very high trestle.
You walk it on a dare
in front of an audience,
and it's the idiot who does not tremble, even though
the sky is the most innocent blue,
and there is just wind, your hair, a brid calling into the gorge.
Photo by Dora Ramirez-Itz
I decided this week I would use some of the poems from my second eBook, Goes Around, Comes Around, published last year.
This is my first selection.
it's a fine day today
it's a fine day
today
the sun shines
on all of us, children
of the bright...
it's a fine day,
today
three pages
of dead people in the paper -
only five younger than me
and one of those
i think
was lying...
a fine day
today,
three pages of dead people
in the paper
and none of them was
me...
(My father and mother, a couple of years before I was born, photographer unknown)
My next poem is from a new (to me) book I bought at the half-priced bookstore this week. The book is Ismaelillo by 19th century revolutionary JOse Marti. My copy of the book, written by Marti for his three year son, was published in 2007 by Wings Press of San Antonio. The original edition of the book was published in Spanish in 1882 in New York. My book is a bilingual edition, with Spanish and English text on facing pages, translated by Tyler Fisher.
Marti was born in 1853 and was killed in battle in 1895. He continues to be a Cuban national hero and an important figure in Latin American literature. In his short life he was a poet, an essayist, a journalist, a revolutionary philosopher, a translator, a professor, a publisher, and a political theorist. He was also a part of the Cuban Freemasons. Through his writings and political activity, he became a symbol for Cuba's bid for independence against Spain in the 19th century, and is referred to as the "Apostle of Cuban Independence." He also fought against the threat of United States expansionism into Cuba. From adolescence, he dedicated his life to the promotion of liberty, political independence for Cuba and intellectual independence for all Spanish Americans; his death was used as a cry for Cuban independence from Spain by both the Cuban revolutionaries and those Cubans previously reluctant to start a revolt.
Errant Love
In search of you
I cross the seas:
My son, the good waves
Take me to you.
Cooling breezes
Cleanse my flesh
Of maggots
From the cities;
But I am sad,
for I can shed
My blood for none
Upon the seas.
Then what to me
Are waves unvaried,
Windswept clouds
Like flying jewels,
The gentle antics
Of the air,
The wrathful voice
Of Hurricane?
The mind was made
To master these!
to tame the wanton,
Fleeting kiss
Of pleasant, little breezes -
My bloodless cheeks
Forever crave
An endless kiss!
And who is sought
With eager panting
By the angel
Pale and white,
That spreads his wings
Upon my chest
And feeds and shelters
Weary ones?
And who is wrapped
Within his wings,
My errant love's soft,
Cloud-like wings?
The skies and seas
Are free of slaves,
And I can shed
My blood for none.
Thus weeps the angel
Pale and white:
He weeps for envy
Of the sky
That covers all
With mottled clouds!
He gathers up
His snowy wings
To shield his anguished
Face within: -
And in the fragrant,
Confused world
That opens in
The deepest shade,
In solemn silence
Bloom colossal
Flowers everlasting,
And on the backs
Of giant birds
Awaken kisses
Never-ending -
There another
Angel rises,
Smiling and alive.
Here's the first Sonyador story for the week, number 24 in the series.
Spider Bite
Dad died when Sonny was 15 years old.
Out chopping cedar for fence posts, a spider bite, a big, black, spot of dead flesh on his leg in three hours, and dead himself in two days.
Dad had a lot of friends, packing the funeral parlor then the church’s gathering room for food after the burying.
Mom and Conch and Sonny were by themselves. Tug had quit his job and left his wife and baby six months ago, went off to Nashville to try to be a country singer. Said he'd be back, but so far, the family hadn’t heard from him, nothing at all to his wife, to Sonny or Conch or even Mom. No one knew where he was; had no way to contact him and tell him about Dad.
So it was up to Sonny.
And he did his best, helping Mom through the service and after. Greeting all Dads’ friends, accepting their condolences; those friends a great help to him. Dad was friends with a lot of people and was admired most who knew him. They all came to pay their respects, tell stories about the times they had with Dad, about the times Dad helped them when were down and need of a couple of dollars or a favor or a sympathetic ear. They wanted to make sure Mom knew they were there to help if help was needed.
“Just a call,” they all said, each in their own way. “Just call us for anything and we’ll be here before you can put down the phone.”
Dad had life insurance with the company where he worked, so even though money would be tight for the family, it wouldn’t be desperate. And Sonny and Conch could both help out. Conch had Sonny’s old job at the Pretts’ grocery store and Sonny had two grocery store jobs, a job every afternoon as a cashier at a bigger grocery store on Main Street and a Saturday job as a bag boy at a supermarket in the town next over. And he also had his own business doing yard work for folks around town.
The family never had really good times, and the times from then on weren't going to be that much worse than they had been before.
It was hard for everyone, special hard for Sonny, not just because he missed his Dad, but also because, even with the three jobs, he was determined to stay in school.
And he did, worked his jobs and worked his school, good enough, at least to make it to the end. And he figured at fifteen that if he could do that at his little high school, he could do it in college as well.
And no one bet against him, cause everyone knew, Sonny had a knack for work and a knack for finishing what he started.
I have two poems now by Richard Sale from another book I picked up at the half-price book store. The book, The Tortilla of Heaven, was published by the University of North Texas Press in 1990. A dedication to the initial purchaser of the book by the poet suggests the two might have been close, which would account for the almost "fresh off the press" condition of the book more than 20 years after publication.
I can find no current information on the poet, but, at the time of publication of this book (his third), he was Professor of English at the University of North Texas, where he had taught since since 1965. After receiving his Ph.D. at the University of Texas at Austin, he was a Fulbright Lecturer in American Civilization and Literature in Morocco in 1963-64. He was the first Director of UNT's Creative Writing Program (1989-1990 edited the journal Texas Books in Review. He was the founding editor-publisher of the Trilobite Press and wrote text for musical compositions in addition to his poetry.
Eva Mae's Daughter
After she had braved the cold hardwood floors,
had perked the coffee and done her exercises,
while I lay in guilty half-sleep, so slowly unswelling,
wanting the cigarette a short arm's length away,
lying in bed again,
Eva Mae's daughter said,
Who do all children hate hot cereal?
Well, I tell you, my heart leaped up at that.
She said, I ask those kids at the art school
if they like hot cereal and they always say no.
My heart leaped up some more.
She said, But they never take it from there,
they don't want to know why.
Now more than awake and hugging the hot coffee mug
like a bowl os steaming porridge,
I said, I am well pleased.
And you should be well pleased, too,
just for digging up that universal.
And then I said, to hide my heart leaping up,
Please, ma'am, can I have some more coffee?
She knew that it was good again and said,
Say: Earth Mother, may I?
Lyrics for a Woman's Voice
1. Wishes Pour Across the Water
Wishes pour across the water
As sequins of the sun.
the green bay flashes jumping fish.
The clear sky stretches past tomorrow.
You might think it beautiful:
It is the loneliest sight in the world.
2. Flesh Trap
My body aches with body,
This heaviness pulls me down,
Pulls me down past the lower angels,
Down past the heart and spirit,
Pulls me down to the bottom circle,
Down to body, down to heavy flesh.
3. The Other Side of Absurdity
In the rain and this barren country,
It is all right today.
Everything is exactly right.
I've already finished my dinner of truth,
and everything is exactly right
On this false, this perfect, happy day.
4. Circe's Song
Easy, take it easy, manny,
Got the wine, got the sun.
What's the work that's calling, manny?
Got the wine, got the sun.
Early morning's shining fancy
(Morning's not the only one).
Easy, take it easy, manny,
Got the wine, got the sun.
5. Ballad
My father was a pretty man,
My mother kind and brave.
My father's in another land,
My mother's in the grave.
My lover's like a turtle-dove;
My lover's brave and kind.
My lover's found another love,
And I read my mother's mind.
Here's a second poem from my book, Goes Around, Comes Around.
admiring the dark
the dark is
staying dark
longer every night
as July
heads for the back door
and August
impatiently
taps its fiery little feet
our front, waiting...
I enjoy
the dark in the morning,
eating breakfast
by the big window,
looking out to the dark
of night waning,
watching
the new day gathering
in the east
just a hint
a bare little shadow of light
remembered
almost lost in the ambient glow
of clouds softly-lit
from below
by the city's night
illuminations,
clouds always glowing
from below
in a city of a million and a half people
fearful of the dark -
porch lights
lit all night, motion lights
flashing bright
with every rustle of leaves
by the wind,
every twitter of a bird -
street lights,
security lights, night lights
that let us sleep
in semi-dark, certain
that whatever evil lurks
outside the luminance we wrap
around our sleeping body
will be as frightened
by the light as we are by the dark
since
fire-tenders
maintained the flames
that kept us safe at night
from the earliest history
of our kind...
meanwhile,
sitting in my well-lit cafe,
typing in the glow of computer electrons,
I admire the beauty of the night
while looking past the dark
to each pool of light around me
calculating the distance between pools, clocking
how quickly I could race in the dark from
one bright pool to the next
if I had
to
Here's a poem by Mairym Cruz-Bernal, from her book,Oh He Face the Light of La Luna, published by Provincetown Arts Press in 1997.
A Puerto Rican poet, translator, and essayist, Cruz-Bernal was born in 1963. She has a BA in Psychology from Loyola University and an MFA from the writing program at Vermont college. Since this book she has published other books, all them translated in numerous languages.
Though she normally writes in both Spanish and English, this was her first book where all the poems (except two) were written originally in English. The other two were written in Spanish and translated to English by the poet.
I begin with the book's title poem.
The Light of the Moon
The little girl crawls to the glass.
She sees and image and laughs and says titi.
That primitive language communicates her wholly.
She looks at the portrait of the baby
hanging on the wall across from the mirror
and laughs and says titti.
She doesn't know that both are her,
that she is someone.
What is reflected in the mirror
is enough for her to laugh and play,
but she knows that the one in the mirror
is the same as the one in the portrait.
She feels I am important to her.
Whenever a stranger comes she hugs my legs,
hiding, until she gets used to the image
of a new human or animal. Everything that moves is the same.
The other night I showed her la luna,
unmoving, round, among all the little lights.
She learned what la luna is.
She goes outside, when it's night,
and with her finger pointing up
she looks at me and smiles and stays still.
On her face the light of la luna.
Now when I want to calm here,even in daytime,
I say la luna and she looks at me. I tell her,
yes, it's there, but the very light of the sun
keeps it from us, but yes it's there,
look, somewhere in the sky.
A Taste of Irony
Since this morning I have a feeling you could taste,
a bitterness on the sides of your mouth.
I woke up from a dream I can't remember.
I have had my hair cut short and a perm to curl it.
I had a striped short dress with no bra on. I hated bras.
I still do. That sensation of feeling the clothes
pressed to my fourteen-year-old nude breasts felt good
and satisfying. Standing in the kitchen, preparing lunch,
he came in and saw me with my new look,
you are so ugly I doubt very much you will ever marry.
I don't think anyone will fall in love with you
Suffering alone, I felt stripped by invisible hands,
defense after defense, garment after garment,
until I was stark naked.
I had to put my lunch inside the refrigerator.
This scene was lived again a month after I met the man
who was to be my husband. I was still in that trance
of hypnotic stare, in love, where things turn blurry.
He came into the house, That man, such an important person,
what would he want from you, you have nothing to offer him,
not a woman enough to be with a man like that.
But I knew the taste of that instant.
Black Sun
I am left alone
to clean the dishes,
to fix the bed
and take the dirt out of this place.
Left on this rainy morning of September,
to think out loud of my whereabouts
and drink some coffee with my soul.
I am alone with this black sun
in a solo piece of music with the rain.
Entirely for myself, to play with my old dolls.
I empty my face of all human reminders
to learn to be a part of the larger farce.
More Sonyador, number 25 of 30.
The Birds
Sonyador, seven last month, sits in the grass in front of his house as the sun begins to fall, in front of the old barrack his dad rebuilt, drinking chocolate milk, his before bed treat for the night, and watches the grackles gather in the tree by the street. Hundreds of the birds, flying in, finding a place on a branch, cackling and shrilling and crawing in disharmony. Then, all at once, as one, flying up from the tree, a black cloud of birds, cackling, rising up, then all together, swarming left, swarming right, then alighting again, all as one, the tree covered in a black feather blanket of birds.
And Sonyador looks at this and wonders, how is it possible for all of them to do all this at once, rise up, turn like a black wave left, then right, then down again.
There must be a boss bird, he thinks, a leader bird that tells all the other birds what to do, when to do it, so they’re always all as one, the one of all the hundreds, the leader who takes them where, somewhere he knows in his brain like he knows when to rise, knowing when, some second clicking clock in black head knowing when to rise, when to turn, and passes it on to all the other birds who do as he says, do as he thinks.
Sonyador thinks it might be good to be the boss bird.
Next, I have three poems by B.H.Fairchild, from his book Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest, published in 2003 by W.W. Norton.
Fairchild was born in Houston and grew up in small towns in the oil fields of Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas, later working through high school and college for his father, a lathe machinist. He taught English and Creative Writing at California State University, San Bernardino and Claremont Graduate University.
As of 2011, it has been announced that Fairchild will teach at The University of North Texas.
I start with the book's title poem.
Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest
In his fifth year the son, deep in the backseat
of his father's Ford and the mysterium
of time, holds time in memory with words,
night, this night, on the way to a stalled rig south
of Kiowa Creek where the plains wind stacks
the skeletons of weeds on barbed-wire fences
and rattles the battered DeKalb sign to make
the child think of time in its passing, of death.
Cattle stare at flat-bed haulers gunning clumps
of black smoke and lugging damaged drill pipe
up the gullied, mud-hollowed road. Road,
this road. Roustabouts shouting form the crow's nest
float like Ascension angels on a ring of lights.
Chokecherries gouge the purpled sky,cloud-
swags running the moon under, and starlight
rains across the Ford's blue hood. Blue, this blue.
Later, where black flies haunt the mud tank,
the boy walks along the pipe rack dragging
a stick across the hollow ends to make a kind
of music, and the creek throbs with frog songs,
locusts, the rasp of tree limbs blown and scattered.
The great horse people, his father, these sounds,
these shapes saved from time's dark creek as the car
moves across the moving earth: world, this world.
Hearing Parker the First Time
The blue notes spiraling up from the transistor radio
tuned to WNOE, New Orleans, lifted me out of bed
in Seward County, Kansas, where the plains wind riffed
telephone wires in tones less strange than the bird songs
of Charlie Parker. I played high school tenor sax the way,
I thought, Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young might have
if they were like me, untalented and white, but Ornithology
came winding up from the dark delta of blues and dixieland
into my room on the treeless and hymn-ridden high plains
like a dust devil spinning me into the Eleusinian mysteries
of the jazz gods though later I would learn that his long
apprenticeship in Kansas City and an eremite's devotion
to the hard rule of craft gave him the hands that held
the reins of the white horse that carried him to New York
and 52nd street, farther form wheat fields and dry creek beds
than I would ever travel, and then carried him away.
On the Passing of Jesus Freaks from the College Classroom
They seemed to come in armies, whole platoons
uniformed in headbands, cut-off jeans,
butt-long hair that fell down in festoons,
and their grins were the ends that justified the means.
But one was different. And alone. His wrist tattoo
cried FATHER on a severed heart that bled.
His arms hung limp as vines, his nails were blue,
his silence was the chorus of the dead.
"Are you saved?" they asked. "Saved from what," I said.
"The flames of hell, your rotten sinful past,
your thing for Desdemona," for we had read
the tragedies, and Othello was the last.
"What's Iago's motive? Was he just sinful?
They thought they knew but waited for a hint.
He raised his hands and wept, "Evil, fucking Evil."
And he meant it. And he knew what he meant.
This fella's voice makes me feel like home. I'm going to do another poem, even though I had only planned to do three.
A Starlit Night
All over America at this hour men are standing
by and open closet door, slacks slung over one arm,
staring at wire hangers, thinking of taxes
or a broken faucet or their first sex: the smell
of back-seat Naugahyde, the hush of a maize field
like breathing, the stars rushing, rushing away.
And a woman lies in an unmade bed watching
the man she has known twenty-one, no,
could it be? twenty-two years, and she is listening
to the polonaise climbing up through radio static
from the kitchen were dishes are piled
and the linoleum floor is a great, gray sea.
It's an A-flat polonaise she practiced endlessly,
never quite getting it right, though her father,
calling from the darkened TV room, always said,
"Beautiful, kiddo!" and the moon would slid across
the lacquered piano top as if it were something
that lived underwater, something from far below.
they both came from houses with photographs,
the smell of camphor in closets, board games
with missing pieces, sunburst clocks in the kitchen
that made them, each morning, a little sad.
they didn't know what they wanted, every night,
every starlit night of their lives, and now they have it.
(My father before his death in 1980, photographer unknown)
One must always look to the sunnyside. This, another poem from my eBook published last year, Goes Around, Comes Around.
day 24,387 and counting
another
day
another
dollar,
a million
days,
a million
dollars...
that's what the fella
down at the Happy Valley Home
told me...
and, depending
on your capacity for
long term planning,
that view can be very
encouraging,
even coming from the
Happy Valley Home cohort
who, if you choose,
can be seen as
not out of touch with reality
but living instead
in a greater reality
closed to the more prosaic
of us -
or not
as for me
I'm a believer in reality,
but only in romantic affairs -
when it comes to money,
I settle
for no less than the
wildest
fantasies
which is why
I am sure
I'm on the road to riches
every day
and while I may not get
the days I need
to get there all the way,
being on the road
to something good
is better
than being stuck
in the weeds
like a back-roads vagabond
with a flat tire
and no spare in the trunk
I'm a human being
of the American
persuasion
after all -
and, like my kind,
want to get
everything there is to et...
and expect, by god,
to get it! -
day 24,387
and counting
Made another trip to the used bookstore this afternoon, found six good poetry books for under $4 a piece.
The next couple of poems are from one of them, Flamingo Watching,published in 1994 by Copper Beech Press.
The poet is Kay Ryan and American poet and educator.
Ryan was born in San Jose, California, and was raised in several areas of the San Joaquin Valley and the Mojave Desert. After attending Antelope Valley College, she received bachelor's and master's degrees in English from University of California, Los Angeles. Since 1971, she has lived in Marin County, California, and has taught English part-time at the College of Marin in Kentfield.
She has published seven volumes of poetry and was the sixteenth United States Poet Laureate, from 2008 to 2010. In 2011, she was named a MacArthur Fellow.
Again, I start with the book's title poem.
Flamingo Watching
Wherever the flamingo goes,
she brings a city's worth
of furbelows. She seems
unnatural by nature -
too vivid and peculiar
a structure to be pretty,
and flexible to the point
of oddity. Perched on
those legs,anything she does
seems like an act. Descending
on her egg or draping her head
along her back,she's
too exact and sinuous
to convince an audience
she's serious. The natural elect,
they think,would be less pink,
less able to relax their necks,
less flamboyant in general.
they privately expect that it's some
poorly jointed bland grey animal
with mitts for hands
whom God protects.
Vacation
It would be pleasant to walk
in Stonehenge or other places
that have rocks arranged on the
basis of a plan, or plans,
inscrutable to modern man;
to wander among grinders
sunk deep in sheep pastures
or simply set on top Peruvian grit;
to gaze up at incisors
no conceivable jaw could fit;
to stretch to be ignorant enough,
scoured to a clean vessel
as pure as the puzzle,vestal
to a mystery involving people,
but without the heat of people.
(My son,after his first over-the-fence home run, photographer unknown)
Sonyador series, poem 26.
Wishing Like Fishing
A year after his dad died, it seemed to Sonny that he was on a hard road with nothing he could see in the future to make it smoother and easier.
His mother was still working at the school cafeteria, full time now, where it had only been a couple of hours a day before Dad died. Tug’s whereabouts still a mystery, nothing heard from him now in nearly two years. His wife and daughter, Sonny’s sister-in-law and his niece gone, moved to California, to San Diego. The word had it that she found another man as was just waiting for her divorce to come through so she could marry him. And Conch, though only twelve, was beginning to show the same kind of wildness defiance that always got Tug in trouble.
And Sonny’s best friend, pretty much his only friend, Bangie had moved back East with his mother after his parents got divorced.
Sonny was sad sometimes, thinking of fishing with Dad, going on trips with Uncle Otto (Oh, how he still missed Uncle Otto and, oh, how he wished he was here to talk to.
But Sony remembered what Uncle Otto told him once, wishing was like fishing without bait, just a waste of time for people who didn’t want to do what needed to be done.
(My younger brother, my older brother, and me, a long time ago, photographer unknown)
It's a conincidence, but after my last library poet, Kay Ryan, with a poem about the mysterious heads on Easter Island, I have poems from a book of photographs and poems devoted entirely to Easter Island and those great rock sculptures.
The book is Their Backs to the Sea, published by Wings Press of San Antonio in 2009, by poet and photographer Margaret Randall.
Randall is a feminist poet, writer, photographer and social activist. Born in New York City in 1936, she has lived for extended periods in Albuquerque, New York, Seville, Mexico City, Havana, and Managua. Her travels included shorter stays in Peru and North Vietnam. In the 1960s she co-founded and co-edited El Corno Emplumaado/The Plumed Horn, a bilingual literary journal for eight years'. From 1984 through 1994 she taught at a number of U.S. universities.
She lived among New York’s abstract expressionists in the 1950s and early ’60s, participate in the Mexican student movement of 1968, observed first had the Cuban revolution and Cuban culture from 1969-1980, the first four years of Nicaragua’s Sandinista project 1980-1984, and visit North Vietnam during the last months of the war in that country, publishing more than 80 books in the meantime.
In 1984, Randall came home to the United States, only to be ordered deported when the government invoked the 1952 McCarran-Walter Immigration and Nationality Act, judging opinions expressed in some of her books to be "against the good order and happiness of the United States." The Center for Constitutional Rights defended her and many writers and others joined in an almost five-year battle for reinstatement of citizenship. She won her case in 1989.
Left-Handed
I
As I watch you, stone-carver ghosts,chipping away
at your mammoth blocks of basalt or tuff,
coaxing prominent noses, pursed lips,
etching decorated ears
and smoothing hollows
where eyes will store and shoot their mana
to a hungry populace,
as I watch you chisel the line of an arm, dropped
to the side, bent slightly forward
to faint shadow of loincloth
fingers reaching for mirrored fingers,
when I observe you,
hammers and polishing-stones in hand,
kneeling in the narrow troughs
whose rock still clings to rock and the giant figure
has yet to free itself,
begin its journey out of the quarry
down rocky slope to the platform
waiting by a vulnerable shore,
the ahu that will be its home
its back to the ferocious sea,
when I dream your rhythms, the focus of your eyes,
weeks or months to a single statue's birth
- long sheets of rain,
heightening the echo of your song,
hundreds working together
or ten or twelve -
I always wonder
if you left hand, like another's left foot
in a distant land
and years into future, or the words
that spill too soon from a troubled mouth
knew what had to be done
and how. Were you left-handed
is my question, one of many.
II
Right hemisphere walks out
across a field of volcanic rock
spewed and settled
before the rising of time.
Bare feet resist daggers
of hardened obsidian,
blood tangles with dry earth
as rhythm dulls pain.
Which side of the brain
designs your palm frond hat,
places a flower
behind your listening ear?
(My niece, recent recipient, the proud uncle must say, of a major league scholarship to a major league university)
This is another poem from my eBook Goes Around, Comes Around.
Habits of Mercy
I was thinking this
morning
about what I want to do
with the rest of my
life
and decided
it's the same thing
I want to do
with the rest of my
day -
kiss
my wife at least once or twice
eat
some good food
write
some good poems
sleep
a nice nap
communicate
with my better nature
& forgive myself
for all recent sins, known, as well as
secret, even to me
easier for some
than for
others, those
with no true love
to kiss -
no food to
eat -
no bed to sleep
in -
no poetry
in their soul -
those
with no key
to unlock the door to self, their
true self as unknown to them as
a stranger passing dark
on the street -
and most difficult of all for
those who can't find within
themselves
forgiveness of themselves
poor
miserable
ego-obsessed creatures that we are,
sinners almost from out first thoughts,
if we cannot forgive ourselves
how will we ever learn to forgive
others
and if we cannot forgive others,
how can we ever live
in this world
that needs cleansed hearts
as much as it needs clean air and water
habits of mercy
are what will save this world;
human sins
forgiven
by human sinners
Next, I have three pieces selected from The Sonnets to Orpheus, the full cycle of 55 poems written by Ranier Maria Rilke "as a grave-monument for Vera Ouckama Knoop," a young woman whose premature death greatly affected Rilke.
This collection was published in 1985 by Simon and Schuster, in the original German with English translation by Stephen Mitchell on the facing page.
XXI
Spring has returned. The earth resembles
a little girl who has memorized
many poems... For all the trouble
of her long learning, she wins the prize.
Her teacher was strict. We loved the white
in the old man's beard and shaggy eyebrows.
Now, whatever we ask about
the blue and the green, she knows, she knows!
Earth, overjoyed to be out on vacation,
play with children. We long to catch up,
jubilant Earth. The happiest will win.
What her teacher taught her, the numberless Things,
and what lies hidden in stem and in deep
difficult root, she sings, she sings!
XXIII
Not till the when flight
no longer for its own sake ascends
into the silent heavens
propelled by its self conceit,
so that, in luminous outlines,
as the tool that has come to power,
it can float, caressed by the wings,
streamlined, agile, and sure -
not till a pure destination
outweighs the boyish boast
of how much machines caan do
will, overwhelmed with gain,
one to whom distance is close
be what alone he flew.
XIII
Be ahead of all parting, as though it already were
behind you, like the winter has just gone by.
For among these winters there is one so endlessly winter
that only by wintering through it will your heart survive.
Be forever dead n Eurydice - more gladly arise
into the seamless life proclaimed in your song.
Here, in the realm of decline, among momentary days,
be the crystal cup that shattered even as it rang.
Be - and yet know the great void where all things begin,
the infinite source of yur own most intense vibration,
so that, this once, you may give it your perfect assent.
To all that is used-up, and all the muffled and dumb
creatures in the world's full reserve, the unsayable sums,
joyfully add yourself and cancel the count.
Once again, in wonderment, I do one more poem than I had intended.
IX
Only he whos bright lyre
has sounded in shadows
may, looking onward, restore
his infinite praise.
Only he who has eaten
poppies with the dead
will not lose ever again
the gentlest chord.
Though the image upon the pool
often grows dim;
Know and be still.
Inside the Double World
all voices become
eternally mild.
Story 27 in the Sonyador series of stories.
Slip-Siding Away
Sonny watches a young mother cuddle her baby, kiss its forehead, whisper, “love you, love you, love you,” blow softly on its belly.
He thinks of how warm and whole the baby must feel in its world of love and care and attention, and was jealous, wishes he could remember a time when he could remember such feelings. He knows his mother loved him, and his father had too, in his way, and thought they must have cuddled and kissed him the way the young mother enfolds her baby in unconditional love. He knows there must have been such times for him, thinking there might not have been was too terrible to think of. But he wishes he could remember.
But there was no cuddling, no loving now, a hot summer, a fourth job, working as a busboy and dishwasher at a hotel in the next town, three nights a week, 11 to 7. Then a couple of hours sleep, then summer school, then work until 7 at the grocery store downtown, except for Saturday when he worked all day at the supermarket down the street from the hotel where he worked on week nights, plus whatever time he could find to take care of his customers’ yardwork.
His algebra teacher told him he needed to learn how to work with a slide rule and though he doubted that was true (sliding sticks back and forth - what a stupid way to do math problems, he thought, like some kind of African tribe, the middle of the twentieth century, for crying out loud, Sputnik circling over head where you could see it on a clear night, talk of going to the moon - somebody was sure to come up with some better way to do calculations that sliding sticks back and forth).
So there it is two hours a day four days a week, sliding sticks back and forth in summer school, even though he’s sure it’s a waste of time learning how to do something that was probably going to be obsolete before he finished high school, or , at least before he finished college, doing it, wearing his slide rule on his belt like all the math nerds did whenever he was in Mrs. Fastenbinder ‘s class because she told him he ought to and he thought it was his responsibility to do what he ought to, even when he thinks it’s a waste of time.
Spending a lot of time in slide rule class wishing he had a girlfriend he could be with instead.
Next I have poems by James Richardson, from his book, a National Book Award Finalist, By the Numbers. The book was published by Copper Canyon Press in 2010.
Richardson has published a number of books and received many poetry honors. He has taught at the University of Virginia, Harvard, Princton and Columbia. For the past 30 years he has lived in New Jersey.
Northwest Passage
That faint line in the dark
might be the shore
of some heretofore unknown
small hour.
The fir-scent on the wind
must be the forests
of the unheard of month
between July and August.
Classic Bar Scenes
1. Apollo at Happy Hour
Shoulders and faint sheen
of lotion, torsion,
loose dress sliding
over flanks of glass,
silks so utterly watery
splashing, as you click along the shine,
on left shin right shin, but alas
the chase is a tired
and tiring metaphor:
let's sit. It is
your Beauty that is omnipotent,
and I the god its constant
victim, automatic
as the keyboard you reach over
accidently typing with a breast
aaaaiiiyyyessssss,
as the copies you press
with a page and another page
that lights again and again your face.
Hear my song:
I will walk out of the 14th floor
and into your ear like a wireless call.
II. Ovidian Deposition
The bull or swan,
face rippling as it changes,
speaks,and for a long, long moment,
you can't tell luck from disaster.
He recited his exploits and cutting-edge features,
all the arts and countries he was lord of.
He was wasted, I think. He walked on the table.
He said his voltage was so out off control.
He said, Relax,what you're feeling is
the great experiences are genetic:
when they happen to you they do not happen to you.
To take the god was to lose the man.
To take the man was to die of the god.
Either might turn me into stone.
I got up For a refill
from the Heliconian well,
and texted from the parking structure
Hadda go...
Pygmalion among the Young
He could tell from their piston shots of laughter,
their bucking and surging
like someone leaning to drive stick,
their pretense and collapse,
their talking on two cells at once,
how they down strange solvents,
their voices sax-raw or helium-high,
how they take each other harshly,
grinding together like stones,
grinding alone like stones, that the young
have statues in them, tall white statues
they must dance out, drink to sleep, outspeed.
Like a finger under a line of type -
O god, slower than that -
their future comes, the party they're late for
where people are saying incredible shit about them
that they have to go to, and say, and say
like how it really is, so they pile in and floor it
till their backs stiffen and their faces change in the wind.
IV. Twilight of a God
That girl who drank from her hands
huge waters of wine,
and his awe,
was it? So that he surfaced,
his head in a little clear spot above the music
and a good bet was
that whatever happened next
wasn't going to happen to him.
Suddenly he wasn't the minor deity,
coat still on, in the corner booth,
smiling benevolently upon his children,
but a guy walking out, head down,
into the cold of an outer borough,
the signs unreadable, the age of Changes over.
Though aren't those still his angels
at the gold bar of Heaven
who lift glass trumpets to their lips?
V. Orpheus at Last Call
One of those dreams: you struggle and fail
for years
to dial a number, read a page, remember
not to look back...
(her hand confused in mine, soft struggle of a bird)
I've drunk so much
it rises in me: something like soft roots
parts softly
and my head sweeps down the singing river singing...
Apollo in Age
Spring,
I am no good with pain.
Stop,
I'll tell you anything.
There are lots of things in the world that could stand some serious rethinking. I ennumrate some of them in this poem from my eBook, Goes Around, Comes Around.
somewhere out there
this is serious business
somewhere
out there
interstellar star systems
are colliding
somewhere
out there
an alien race
of whoozidoozits
is going extinct as their
methane atmosphere
is slowly replaced
by megaterlagon oxygen farts
somewhere
out there
a spaceship full of
Baptist
is approaching
the water-planet
Abosion XII
for full-emersion
baptism
somewhere
out there
Pat Boone is thinking about
a comeback tour
somewhere
out there
a Republican
is suffering from delusions
of competency
somewhere
out there
a bunch of foreigners who don't
even speak English
are bouncing balls off their heads
and calling it
football
I mean
this is no damn time
for jokes
and silly faces
My next poems are by Paul Muldoon, from his book Moy Sand and Gravel. The book was published in 2002 byh Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Muldoon, an Irish poet, was born in 1951 He has published over thirty collections and won a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the T. S. Eliot Prize. He held the post of Oxford Professor of Poetry from 1999 - 2004. At Princeton University he is both the Howard G. B. Clark ’21 Professor in the Humanities and chair of the Lewis Center for the Arts. He is also the president of the Poetry Society of the U.K. and Poetry Editor at The New Yorker.
Once again (it seems to be a habit this week) I begin with the book's title poem.
Moy Sand and Gravel
To come out of the Olympic Cinema and be taken aback
by how, in the time it took a dolly to travel
along its little track
to the point where two movie stars' heads
had come together smackety-smack
and their kiss filled the whole screen,
those two great towers directly across the road
at Moy Sand and Gravel
had already washed, at least once, what had flowed
or been dredged from the Blackwater's bed
and were washing it again, load by load,
as if washing might make it clean.
The Braggart
He sucked, he'll have you know,
the telltale sixth toe
of a woman who looked like a young Marilyn Monroe,
he hubby getting a little stroppy
when he found them there in the back of that old jalopy.
Other papers please copy.
The Breather
Think of this gravestone
as a long,low chair
strategically placed
at a turn in the stair.
An Old Pit Pony
An old pit pony walks
its chalks
across a blasted heath.
Its coat is a cloud hung on a line.
It sighs
for the pit-propped skies
of that world beneath.
Its coat is a cloud hung on a line.
Closing in on the end of my 30 days - 30 stories challenge. This is number 28.
Flying
Sonyador rides his bike faster and faster on the sandy road, the wind on his face blowing stronger and stronger and he feels like he might fly, might takeoff into the blue summer sky like a giant two-wheeled bird.
He feels like he could fly.
The last poet from my library this week is Ron Slate. His poem is from his book The Great Wave, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2009.
Slate was born in Quincy, Massachusetts in 1950. He received an MA in creative writing from Stanford University in 1973. His earlier collection The Incentive of the Maggot, was chosen by Robert Pinsky for the Bakeless Poetry Prize and was a winner of the Larry Levis Reading Prize from Virginia Commonwealth University.
Slate has worked as a corporate speechwriter and as vice president of global communications for EMC Corporation.
Krushchev's Foot
Looming before us is the pale, tender,
childlike foot of Nikita Krushchev.
Size 7 or 8, "like a boy's" according
to Sergei, his son, on the lecture circuit.
A shoe meant a lot to a Russian foot,
something you'd tug off a frozen corpse.
A shoe meant a lot to a British head of state,
to tap a shoe on the rostrum in Parliament
expressed the highest degree of obstruction.
So when Khruschev slammed his shoe on a desk
in the U.N., it meant megatons to us
but just a parliamentary flourish to him,
designed to make P.M. Macmillan, orating
unmenorably, feel at home.
Such a delicate foot, veined and moist -
it makes me want to reveal a secret,
and expendable one, declassified.
One night when I was seven years old,
my father woke me at three A.M.
to scan the sky for the coming
of the satellite, Kruschev's star.
There was nothing to impede the view,
not a wisp of cloud. So small and sharp,
bristling with speed, and gone -
It was then I knew I wanted to be
something to admire. Maybe to fear.
Of course, the massing of mistrust
between father and son,
our standoff in the Divided City
had something to do with it.
Disclosed: the Premier told his aides
to place a shoe under his desk.
A single American penny loafer.
Agrarian reformer on a hot day in May,
he had walked into the General Assembly
wearing socks and sandals.
If a person's nature is harsh
and resolute, may it also keep us
vigilant and entertained.
Years later, the child may explain
exactly what the father meant to say.
It was a very hot summer last summer, as described in this poem from my book, Goes Around, Comes Around, published if I remember right in the middle of it.
the Hawaiian shirt plan
it's a kind of an
orange/yellow thing
with palm trees
and some kind of
liquor bottle
with sailing ships
o the label -
it's one of seven
Hawaiian shirts I bought
a couple of weeks ago -
the one I have on today
part of my new
strategy for facing
south Texas summer -
embrace it!
no more hiding
in my air conditioned house
for four months, tasting
unprocessed outside air
only for the time it takes
to get from my air conditioned
house to my air conditioned car...
instead
i will sweat, just
as one's supposed to
when it's 100 degrees
in 85 percent humidity
i will wear my salt-stained
Hawaiian shirts daily,
i will work at leas one hour
per day in my backyard
in the cinder-roasting sun
as lightly dressed as allowed
by law, my fish-white belly
will be brown like the pecans
that fall from the tree, my
feet will become summer rough
again, my hands black & bruised
from digging in the dark soil
and sharp caliche rock
I will be like the ancient people
who made their hard lives here,
among the cactus and hills,
rocky meadows, summer heat,
and north winds of winter
I will be seven years old again
when summer was my friend
i will be summer
And now, Sonyador story number 29. One more to go.
Sasha
Sonny sleeps and he dreams of the people he’s known.
But he stirs, comes slowly awake, realizes there’s someone in the room with him, someone standing beside his bed.
It's Sasha!
“Sasha,” he cries out.
“No sir,” she says. “I’m Gloria. I’m your nurse.”
Here's a last poem for this week from my eBook, Goes Around, Comes Around, available at lots of places, cheap, too.
A suitable piece for this political season of bumblers and fools.
the liberal godless socialist media will never tell you this...
the liberal, godless socialist media
will never tell you
this...
Barack Obama was born in a hospital
and has five toes
on each foot
Nancy Pelosi
brushes her teeth with
Pepsodent
Harry Reed
grew up in a Nevada desert
with sand
in his underpants
Hilary Clinton
was a Presbyterian
in her youth and while
in the White House
was very close to a number of
self-confessed
thespians
many Democrats
are white men who can't
dance
many other Democrats
are black people in possession of natural
rhythm
and great recipes for sweet-potato pie
some Democrat women
wear underpants and some
do not - unlike Harry Reed, none
of the Democrat women
who wear underpants have sand
in them
Ted Kennedy was
mortal - unlike Ronald
Reagan who will live forever
in the right-thinking minds of our viewers
who know that we, here at the
Squirrel Network,
report all the news, including
the important secret stuff
the regular
liberal
godless
socialist media
will never let you
know
Here it is, the end of thirty stories in thirty days.
Even Dreams Must Someday End
Sonyador, the dreamer, dreams.
And the dreams seem more real than anything else; more real than the bed he lies in, the machine by his bed going blip, blip, blip, night and day, the infections, the nurses and the doctors, more real, even, than the catheter they inserted in his penis that hurt so much when they did it. That pain a shadow now, barely noticed among all the other shadows behind his dreams.
He is confused, a woman who said she was his wife came today, but he did not know her, did not know her name, did not know he had wife.
He has no wife in his dreams, all those years past, alive again in his sleep. His father long dead, victim of outrageous fortune, his mother, happily mindless in her nursing home until one night, when the truth of all things befell her, Tug, the brother he loved and idolized, gone so long ago, if not dead now, very, very old, Conch, his younger brother, lost in a faraway jungle in 1969, never found, presumed dead, Uncle Otto, another wrong death, Sasha, the mystery, the ever-sustaining myth of his life, and all the other people who walked upon the stage of his life, his teachers, and the boy who tried to push him around and Mr. and Mrs. Pretts, all back again, alive again, but only for as long as he can dream.
He had a knack for work, it was always said, and a knack for money, as it turned out. Though rich he became because he had a knack for work and acquisition, never rich enough to make up for lack of the knack for friends. No knack for friendship like his father had, no knack for friends who would be with him in this sterile, dismal place.
In the end, like everyone, like you and me, he becomes a victim of who he was. And he dreams of all those who might have made him different. His life, a product of all he ever was and all those who were in his time with him, in the end all before him again in sweet dreams of times before he became he who lies dreaming.
He weeps in his sleep because even in his sleep, maybe only in his sleep, he knows the dreams are just dreams, not real, all those people are not real. And he weeps, because he knows he is but a dream as well, a long dream ending soon.
Sonyador has grown so accustomed to the blip,blip,blip of the monitor beside his bed that he doesn’t hear it anymore.
Until it stops.
The dreamer who grew alone now dreams alone, until he dreams no more.
And all the dreams end, fading, as does he.
That's it. Everything belongs to those who created it. My stuff is free, if your properly credit me and "Here and Now."
I'm allen itz, owner and producer of this blog.
And this is what I've been up to:
"Always to the Light"
"Goes Around, Comes Around"
"Pushing Clouds Against the Wind"
And
For those of a print-bent, available on Amazon
"Seven Beats a Second"
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