Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Sonnet for the Habitant

click to expand


I could use a break,

Exhausted as I am from speaking now,

From speaking earth, from speaking love,


So I swallow my fresh veggies

And go blank as an act of will

Under a caravan of summer clouds,


Up to my shins in wild oregano

In a field of Joe-Pye tall-blooming and

Aflutter with swallowtails, an empty boat

Adrift on an afternoon in August.


If it's true that I'm here by mistake

Better to stop thinking in sentences

And do nothing to speak of,

Making the most of it, not coming back.









Friday, July 27, 2018

Sunset Moonrise



  
Still enough

                    to feel this old earth roll

Old enough
                     
                    to be unsure

                                        of everything

But this

                    and when the poet asks

                                         Is there another world?

I know there is

                    I know there is  

                                        and it is this.






—Reading Justin Boening


Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Entering the Realm of Dusk

Laurel Hill Crrek Valley


The sun has left the sky,

The valleys fill with fog,

The elements assemble,

All the scattered elements of the earth

And all the children of heaven

Gather over the creeks and rills.


I have lived a good deal

in the mist-bound solitudes.

If the hills would bow down

I could see her again.











Sunday, July 22, 2018

Ekstasis

Ken Christison photo 

To be here and there at once,

Otherworldly and ecstatic,

Accompanied by music,

An ancient, mystic Greek,

Trying to say what can't be said

For there is no vocabulary,

Only equations and optics

For shifting distances,

The moon so far away

And beside you here among trees,

The loves burning inside you

You will not see again.








Friday, July 20, 2018

Caesura



Slow as shadows

Drifting with the sun,

Quiet listeners

To the stories of the Earth.









Sunday, July 15, 2018

An Artist's Inclination



More him than her, this portrait of my girl,

painted from memory by my discouraged father,

a uniform distortion, the nose too wide, the mouth

too grim, the eyes not far enough apart,

and missing most of all the bemused joy

that charmed me all her life, both of them

now dead—memory, death, memory, death,

what drives our thirst for love—

his talent wasted in the war, then in the mills


Until they closed, then in the shops, working

where he had to work to drive bright cars,

squandering his artist's touch for forty years,

until, at last, he uncased his brushes

and old oils, some still center-soft

in dark lead tubes, and tried as best he could

to paint again, the girl he never knew

but surely loved, and failed, his last attempt.


Salvaged from the sale following his suicide,

I kept it in a sack for forty years.

This spring, a decade since her presence stayed

beside me for awhile under the magnolias

outside Roosevelt Hospital, and I watched

her spirit rise through a shower of petals,

I hung it on the wall, an answer to myself

to keep on writing, I owe that much to her,

and know the fate, if not more me than him.















Wednesday, July 04, 2018

Ode to Torpor: Fourth-Found Poem

Hot sky

  

Weakly-praised poet J. O'Brien reads

inadequately-praised poet Robert “Uncle Dog” Sward

on the Fourth of July, 2018, on the back porch

in 90-degreee torpor with the grass in need

of mowing and too-few bees sluggish in the yard clover,


He condenses:


Glory be to God for tedium,

for no news about anything.


Glory be to God for inaction,

for not getting things done,


Slow and easy,

slow and easy,

Glory be to God,

O glory.









Tuesday, July 03, 2018

Creature in Haze



Insular, the green mist of morning,

the woods whispering in profound calm,

the jarring discord of harsh speech

hushed in a dripping through leaves —

born for this, woodland creature

among tall trees and deep ferns,

taking hope from the screech owl

perched in gray silhouette,

muffled, spirit-like gasps

in the wooded morning twilight,

in the dusk of an age.







—with two lines from the journal of Thoreau.


Sunday, July 01, 2018

Similitude, Its Irony

Atlantic dawn. Expand with a click.


Then did you mean that other world,

Or this one, safely shared in silence?


I meant that place where minds entwine,

Were we not lost in perfect parallel.