Thursday, December 31, 2015

12.31.15


Happy new year. I know there are a million poems, but I heard this on the radio on the way home tonight. Apologies for not having as much material lately. I had gotten into this thing where I was posting only new poems for weekend words, and then stopped writing any, and for some reason wouldn't go into the massive internet tome on my cloud. I know, right? 


On The Turning Away



On the turning away
From the pale and downtrodden,
And the words they say
Which we won't understand:
"Don't accept that what's happening
Is just a case of others' suffering
Or you'll find that you're joining in
The turning away" 

It's a sin that somehow
Light is changing to shadow
And casting it's shroud
Over all we have known;
Unaware how the ranks have grown,
Driven on by a heart of stone,
We could find that we're all alone
In the dream of the proud 

On the wings of the night,
As the daytime is stirring
Where the speechless unite
In a silent accord
Using words you will find are strange
And mesmerized as they light the flame
Feel the new wind of change
On the wings of the night 

No more turning away
From the weak and the weary
No more turning away
From the coldness inside;
Just a world that we all must share
It's not enough just to stand and stare,
Is it only a dream that there'll be
No more turning away?


Poetry.org sent me an email the other day asking me to give them money to be a "champion of poetry". I definitely think we ought to support the arts, and I definitely appreciate the content they send me in my email each day. Although I had a to laugh a little, thinking, if this blog isn't "championing poetry" I'm not sure what is! (I'm sure my two readers can appreciate that). 

Monday, December 21, 2015

12.21.15

Weekend words for you. I bet you'll recognize the theme, I tend to go on about it. Time for some new inspiration! (oh, and enjoyable solstice to all)


12/19/15



I saw a crook-necked cormorant in the slough
when the river was moving high, and clouded with silt.
He moved with expertise through soggy reeds,
effortlessness I envied for myself.


In all the rest of the walk I saw no bird
--save ubiquitous gulls, so far inland
and not the master of their domain
(never mind their raucous opinion).
Who could so navigate, despite the rain
terrain, rough and without footpaths
for our steps.
We forget so easily that we’ve tamed
our universe, though it is plain as grass
submerged in water to such depth
as makes it point in raked stripes
like lines of ink.

12.20.15

Here is a selection of poems that seem to be about the season at first. I had been hanging on to a few of these in my email for a while, wanting to put them together.  


A Yellow Leaf

By Ariana Reines




It’s shivering
Like a little lady rattling her bell
Calling for tea
Quivering in the old style

There’s a red light in Boston
At the close of day
Like the red light of idiocy
All along the bricks
Of Harvard Yard & a blue
Sky so hard & irradiated
In the way of old cinema
Whose screens
Reflect the pops & black
Rot spattered
As though it were something
Perhaps nice
As if to say please
No extra charge
Please
Visualize now the idea of your blind spot
I will even do it for you
As the physical reel unspools
& unspools & you blink
In a dark
Room narrow with shadows
Narrow shadows like avant-gardes

It was a dream that woke up
The Fall

It really is something
A sick feeling
Like stopping lying
A dangerous feeling
Like giving up trying to live as though you were otherwise

As though my mouth could water along the split
Waistlines of all the apricot colored squashes
As though the real pumpkins, horns
Of plenty at my hearth
& in my wealth, my death
Were visibly grinning
Thru the rosebud lip of womanhood
Behind which all the women
I really am (they claim)
Hide behind my face & do their flips
Behind my teeth
In the red darkness there
In my potions
In my chemicals
In the mouth I never use
In my poisonous mouth


I get various lenses and screens (this works literally in this poem, not even apologizing for that!) in the way the speaker views the season. In the hard, sere colors of the early winter, things are hidden and displayed. The colors and the cold bring the speaker back in time, with the old lady and the brick landscape, and reel-to-reel projector. Being me, I would put the lens of nostalgia over this, and suggest the speaker sees winter in (or as) a blind spot. What is in that spot is the same secret hidden behind the speaker's face, perhaps. I feel like this deserves a better close reading, with some creative people to help me see more in it. 
 
Paris Winter

by Howard Altmann




That we can breathe and not forget
our dreams entirely. In the cold sun

the warmth of timelessness. There is
panic, rest assured, so much beauty

stirring, I want to touch all that
contains me. We know the questions

and the light shifts without a word.
In the clouds, a philosopher’s chair

rocks. In the riverbed, the buff
and lathe of stones, change glistening

past. And from the afternoon, drops
of her monthly blood drip down

the stairs, the kitchen table, all of her
unopened bills, a cold floor that timed

us. O, the ins and outs of memory
breathe, too, images at rest in the dark

chambers, the gilded daylight whir
a heart’s dusting—one walkup,

one post storm quiet blinking at
infinity. Who shot the moon

and claimed victory in the morning?
The constellations touch down;

the years collapse; the boom
and bust of love lowers the crane

at dawn: in what earth, in what sky
will the soul find its keeper?




This poem starts out with more traditional images of timeless winter; water-tumbled stones, cold clear days, stark cloud-shapes, etc. Then, halfway through, the mundane is like a betrayal to the beautiful images. Or maybe a counterbalance. I particularly like "the cold floor timed us"--timed for speed, marked days passing, perhaps in a judgement of all things mundane. "The ins and outs of memory" is so perfect a way to descripe the vagaries of how we actually remember things (it makes you question the speaker a little, especially with things like "gilded daylights whir/ a heart's dusting" that are so archetypal). I like an unreliable narrator though, they are more relatable. 



The Lighted Window

by Sara Teasdale


He said:
“In the winter dusk
When the pavements were gleaming with rain,
I walked thru a dingy street
Hurried, harassed,
Thinking of all my problems that never are solved.
Suddenly out of the mist, a flaring gas-jet
Shone from a huddled shop.
I saw thru the bleary window
A mass of playthings:
False-faces hung on strings,
Valentines, paper and tinsel,
Tops of scarlet and green,
Candy, marbles, jacks—
A confusion of color
Pathetically gaudy and cheap.
All of my boyhood
Rushed back.
Once more these things were treasures
Wildly desired.
With covetous eyes I looked again at the marbles,
The precious agates, the pee-wees, the chinies—
Then I passed on.

In the winter dusk,
The pavements were gleaming with rain;
There in the lighted window
I left my boyhood.”




I think this one is the most straightforward of the bunch. The lens is a mirror, in which the speaker sees his memory. His memory changes how he feels about the acquisition of simple things, at least momentarily, which brings embarrassment. The visual effects are of contrast, and pretty simple: dark street, lamp light and wet pavement, contrasted with a bright, shining, colorful display window. It could be out of Hallmark movie. (It pains me to capitalize that) However I think this relatable as well, in its simplicity and the fact that we can all remember the Christmases of our childhood.

Friday, December 11, 2015

12.11.15

It's unfortunate that I sometimes learn of poets only after they have passed. A friend of mine posted that Native American poet John Trudell passed away from cancer recently. He is credited with connecting the spoken word of poetry with the oral traditions and histories of his people. He was one of the student-activists who occupied Alcatraz in 1970. His political involvements even earned him an FBI dossier. Tragically, his entire family died in a housefire that had suspicious origins, possibly targeting them due to his work. His words and work connected him to musical artists who helped make his poems into songs, and invited him to perform with them. Trudell acted in various movies as well, from fictional stories to documentaries.


Races


You are a Brother
And a Sister
In the colors of Life


Some people believe
They are races
Human races
Whatever that may be


Races are for running
The competitive edge
Distrust and confusion
Leaving alterations
In innocent faces


We are natural Life
A part of Mother Earth's design
A blending of colors
To make the difference
In the teaching
of meanings




We are colors
in the family
of Life.



Because much of his work is spoken word, I have been having a bit of a tough time finding his work online so I can reproduce it quickly to share. This transcription of a talk in San Francisco in 2001 has a variety of poetry, although I can't attribute them correctly with titles etc as they are taken down from speech. (definitely read the talk, his speech is thoughtful and thought-provoking)



Iktomi



I flew with the eagles
Until I fell from the nest
I ran with the wolves
Then got lost from the pack

Slowly I go crazy every day
Some days run faster than others
I never strayed into heaven
It was hard getting past hell
I traveled through and beyond
The death and birth of man
I am Iktomi

Imagine running out of imagine
Mistaking authority for power
Weaving lifes free spirit
Into patterns of control

I heard all that was said
Until now I hear nothing at all
The edge between twilight and dark
The great lie lurks
Prostitution of soul
Anyone can do it or not
I went down some roads that
Stopped me dead in my tracks
I am Iktomi

I've been the mirror
To others reflecting selves
I've known love that can't help
But love and I've been close
To that hurting way of love

I flew with the eagles
Until I fell from the nest
I ran with the wolves
Then got lost from the pack

From the earth
Wind cave memories
One with the sky
Time of different motions
Dog days dreamer
Chasing the neon
Woven into minds
I am Iktomi

From my place in line
I fell out of order
I've been here
I've been there .I've been anywhere
And
I haven't been anywhere
And I'll be back again
I am Iktomi

Imagine running out of imagine
Mistaking authority for power
Weaving lifes free spirit
Into patterns of control


If you are interested in other material, Trudell's first chapbook; a compilation of spoken word and music; a collection of poems and other materials, are all things referenced in the original article.


Journey


Moths and other sacred wings 
Butterflies and bees whisper 
And breath of the wind 
Blessed way blessing way things 

Dreams are the mind streams 
Thought pictures of the spirit 
There are dreams of the day 
There are dreams of the night 

Thinking and dreaming are related 
Dreams of the day we make our own 
Dreams of night, part of eternal stone 
There are dream takers 
Taking from dream worlds 
Taking dreams as a way of 
Stealing thoughts 

Turning minds inside and out 
Dream slavers want to change 
Our connections to ourselves 
Mess with our dreams make us unsure 
Unclear about right and wrong 
Feed our dreams and instincts 
To industrial profit machine 

Difference between dream and fantasy 
Reality and illusion center and no center 
Dreams of the day keep our spirit alive 
Our creative mind who we really are 

With dreams we can create and heal 
Follow our original purpose 
Dreams are protection good medicine 
Blessed way blessed way things 

Sun and Moon continue 
We are all on one journey

Monday, December 7, 2015

12.7.15

I saw this poem today and thought it was the poetic equivalent of a mic-drop.


And the Sea


by Patrick Ryan Frank




Once, I wanted to be Hemingway.
But so did Hemingway. That act is hard—
dumb facts decked out as art, and anyway,
who gets what they want? And then who cares?
What matters when the water at your feet
is running out without you? I grew my beard
and bought a little boat on credit, named
it after myself and painted all of it blue,
then put us out to sea. And when it’s calm
and when the sun is out, we disappear.
We’re gone. What else was I supposed to do?


I haven't read much Hemmingway, and none of it nautical, but here are some quotes from The Old Man and the Sea to maybe get at what Patrick was saying. 


“He always thought of the sea as 'la mar' which is what people call her in Spanish when they love her. Sometimes those who love her say bad things of her but they are always said as though she were a woman. Some of the younger fishermen, those who used buoys as floats for their lines and had motorboats, bought when the shark livers had brought much money, spoke of her as 'el mar' which is masculine.They spoke of her as a contestant or a place or even an enemy. But the old man always thought of her as feminine and as something that gave or withheld great favours, and if she did wild or wicked things it was because she could not help them. The moon affects her as it does a woman, he thought.” 


“He no longer dreamed of storms, nor of women, nor of great occurrences, nor of great fish, nor fights, nor contests of strength, nor of his wife. He only dreamed of places now and the lions on the beach. They played like young cats in the dusk and he loved them as he loved the boy. He never dreamed about the boy. He simply woke, looked out the open door at the moon and unrolled his trousers and put them on.” 

― Ernest HemingwayThe Old Man and the Sea




I'm not sure what to make of the poem, whether is the speaker is upset that he followed a pattern made by another writer, or upset because that pattern seemed inevitable, or maybe that he didn't think of it sooner? To maybe get a better idea for his voice, here are some more of his poems. 




Gamophobia 


          ~the fear of marriage 


It's just that each of us is engaged already—
to Death, that great polygamist. Why take
a hand that will be taken from you, steady
or not, leaving just the anger and ache
of a lover lost to a rival? I can't compete
with that insatiable heart, which burns and burns
us all to nothing. His love is utter, complete,
the stuff of legends, impossible to spurn.
Every time we cross the street, I fear
he'll catch us holding hands. He's the jealous type.
I can see it now: we're kissing and Death appears
with a rush and crash, taking bloody swipes
as the neighbors say, Kids and their reckless hearts;
everybody knew it was doomed from the start
.



Projectionist


There is nothing that I cannot show you,
no face nor body, hour of any day,
no place too far or strange for me to reveal
among the permutations of my light,
penumbras, focus and the turning reel.
Though we will never meet, I will know you
when you settle in your seat and the fugitives hide
and a green car idles in an alleyway;
while always I in my Plutonic dark—
unknown, unknowingly beloved—work
lavishly my magic with my lamp
and lens and spool. Look, the lovers linger
on a hushed side street. Look, the enemy camp.
And here you are, rushing between my fingers.




These works are intriguing, they ask for closer reading. I like that that they are similar in size and length (the last two being semi-traditionally-structured sonnets), and each builds a story and image in a short time, but still leads the reader to what is not written, that may follow. I like the first-person narration from the speaker as well, it gets right to the meat of things. I hope you like them too. 

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

12.2.2015

I picked this poem because I liked it when it came in my email (and so relatable--I imagine most of us have spent an otherwise perfect moment obsession over imperfections). However, I liked Greenbaum's pacing and diction an awful lot, so I decided to bring you some more. I love the speaking pace of the words, and I imagine the speaker talking to themselves as if no one was around.


A Nearly Perfect Morning


By Jessica Greenbaum 



It was a nearly perfect morning—bucolic, pastoral—
so I found myself cataloguing my past humiliations.
Really, there was no reason for it! I might as well have
looked for an ant hill to lie down on in a meadow
of goldenrod. I can’t explain it but perhaps I thought
that with the rising sun as my witness, with the catbirds
crows, and whizzing hummingbirds my soundtrack
that I could ameliorate them, neutralize their charges
against me by holding them up to the woods now in wait
for the light to balance on their individual leaves, on
the absorbing vastness of my fortune. The concentric rings
of the spider web have the wiry shine of guitar strings
there’s been so little wind it seems the trees have not
yet shook themselves awake, but we are moving around
this light at such a pace that by now the sun is nested
in the crook of two thin branches that could not hold
anything else. I was barely up to the third count
against my integrity when the whole lake turned white
but I decided it was not aghast, just trying to erase.




A Poem for S. 


Because you used to leaf through the dictionary,
Casually, as someone might in a barber shop, and
Devotedly, as someone might in a sanctuary,
Each letter would still have your attention if not
For the responsibilities life has tightly fit, like
Gears around the cog of you, like so many petals
Hinged on a daisy. That’s why I’ll just use your
Initial. Do you know that in one treasured story, a
Jewish ancestor, horseback in the woods at Yom
Kippur, and stranded without a prayer book,
Looked into the darkness and realized he had
Merely to name the alphabet to ask forgiveness—
No congregation of figures needed, he could speak
One letter at a time because all of creation
Proceeded from those. He fed his horse, and then
Quietly, because it was from his heart, he
Recited them slowly, from aleph to tav. Within those
Sounds, all others were born, all manner of
Trials, actions, emotions, everything needed to
Understand who he was, had been, how flaws
Venerate the human being, how aspirations return
Without spite. Now for you, may your wife’s
X-ray return with good news, may we raise our
Zarfs to both your names in the Great Book of Life.


This poem is an acrostic!! What a fantastic motif to put in, I didn't even notice it until I was copying-and-pasting! It is a strong motif, but not self-congratulatory. I would certainly be a little smug if I managed to pull the thing off. (Note, because I had to look this up, a zarf is the metal handle added to glass vessels meant to hold hot beverages). 

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

12.1.15

Weekend words, so I can say I did it. ("I'm only here so I won't get fined")




11.24.15



I witnessed someone seeing their first ghost.
I was jealous because I remember
the fear and power in the realization
the understanding of new knowledge
that no one could steal;
part vision, part memory.

Now my memories hardly touch me.
The potential for embarrassment is too
great--I hurt to consider it
and hope everyone else has forgotten it, too.
I hurt to consider the memories of hurting,
even though I can access them in my own words.

You can see me now, I am substantial.
(I have been told).
Of this I am not sure, the evidence
is not convincing.
Your knives might pass right through--
hitting no meat, and no organ of value.