Monday, November 23, 2020

the wages of dying is love

 1

 You scream, waking from a nightmare.

When I sleepwalk
into your room, and pick you up,
and hold you up in the moonlight, you cling to me
hard,
as if clinging could save us. I think
you think
I will never die, I think I exude
to you the permanence of smoke or stars,
even as
my broken arms heal themselves around you.

2

I have heard you tell
the sun, don't go down, I have stood by
as you told the flower, don't grow old,
don't die. Little Maud,

I would blow the flame out of your silver cup,
I would suck the rot from your fingernail,
I would brush your sprouting hair of the dying light,
I would scrape the rust off your ivory bones,
I would help death escape through the little ribs of your body,
I would alchemize the ashes of your cradle back into wood,
I would let nothing of you go, ever,

until washerwomen
feel the clothes fall asleep in their hands,
and hens scratch their spell across hatchet blades,
and rats walk away from the cultures of the plague,
and iron twists weapons toward the true north,
and grease refuses to slide in the machinery of progress,
and men feel as free on earth as fleas on the bodies of men,
and lovers no longer whisper to the presence beside them in the
dark, O corpse-to-be ...

And yet perhaps this is the reason you cry,
this the nightmare you wake screaming from:
being forever
in the pre-trembling of a house that falls.

3

In a restaurant once, everyone
quietly eating, you clambered up
on my lap: to all
the mouthfuls rising toward
all the mouths, at the top of your voice
you cried
your one word, caca! caca! caca!
and each spoonful
stopped, a moment, in midair, in its withering
steam.

Yes,
you cling because
I, like you, only sooner
than you, will go down
the path of vanished alphabets,
the roadlessness
to the other side of the darkness,

your arms
like the shoes left behind,
like the adjectives in the halting speech
of old men,
which once could call up the lost nouns.

4

And you yourself,
some impossible Tuesday
in the year Two Thousand and Nine, will walk out
among the black stones
of the field, in the rain,

and the stones saying
over their one word, ci-gît, ci-gît, ci-gît,

and the raindrops
hitting you on the fontanel
over and over, and you standing there
unable to let them in.

5

If one day it happens
you find yourself with someone you love
in a café at one end
of the Pont Mirabeau, at the zinc bar
where white wine stands in upward opening glasses,

and if you commit then, as we did, the error
of thinking,
one day all this will only be memory,

learn,
as you stand
at this end of the bridge which arcs,
from love, you think, into enduring love,
learn to reach deeper
into the sorrows
to come – to touch
the almost imaginary bones
under the face, to hear under the laughter
the wind crying across the black stones. Kiss
the mouth
which tells you, here,
here is the world. This mouth. This laughter. These temple bones.

The still undanced cadence of vanishing.

6

In the light the moon
sends back, I can see in your eyes

the hand that waved once
in my father's eyes, a tiny kite
wobbling far up in the twilight of his last look:

and the angel
of all mortal things lets go the string.

7

Back you go, into your crib.

The last blackbird lights up his gold wings: farewell.
Your eyes close inside your head,
in sleep. Already
in your dreams the hours begin to sing.

Little sleep's-head sprouting hair in the moonlight,
when I come back
we will go out together,
we will walk out together among
the ten thousand things,
each scratched too late with such knowledge, the wages
of dying is love. 

 


Little Sleep's-Head Sprouting Hair In The Moonlight, Galway Kinnell 

image:

 

Saturday, November 14, 2020

Riding a bicycle with no hands

 

 
The Far East. The Great North. The Wild West. The Great Bear Lake. Tristan da Cunha. The Mississippi Delta. Stromboli. The old houses of Charlottenburg. Albert Camus. The morning light. The child’s eyes. The swim in the waterfall. The spots of the first drops of rain. The sun. The bread and wine. Hopping. Easter. The veins of leaves. The blowing grass. The color of stones. The pebbles on the stream’s bed. The white tablecloth outdoors. The dream of the house in the house. The dear one asleep in the next room. The peaceful Sundays. The horizon. The light from the room in the garden. The night flight. Riding a bicycle with no hands. The beautiful stranger. My father. My mother. My wife. My child.

 

Wings of Desire, Wim Wenders,

  image: healzo.deviantart.com

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

waiting all this time

 

 

Veteran's Day


The boys of summer are climbing the building, 
splayed dark against the stone, they are using ropes.
Climbing together, three of them, in T-shirts

and corduroys, hauling each other up, story
by story, stopping to speak carefully, deciding
direction: who will go first, who will belay,

who will wait on the ledge they are leaving, climbing
slowly this way, watching each other's sneakers.
Years planning, a few missteps admittedly,

several mix-ups at bus stations, a few times,
the phone ringing, no one there, but now
the boy are climbing and together, deliberate 

as flies. Below them, the doors open. Grownups
stumble out, dazed from inside the dark, to watch
the boys climbing in the sun, some whistling 

between their teeth, some grumbling a little. 
As women, settling on the grass, spread their skirts,
the boys test their holds, put, each of them, one foot

on the ledge and bounce on their heels to feel the rope
pull taut and safe, and they don't look down. Some
of the grownups are thinking of calling the police. 

The boys of summer climb, stopping now only
to rest, pressing their faces flat against the stone
to watch each other and wink, wondering

how they'll hook up to the fourth floor, where they know
there are suddenly windows. The day wanes. It is,
after all, November. The dark comes early.

Windows, as the expected, open. Hands grab
for their long American legs. The boys, laughing, 
pull up their feet and stand, watching the fingers

crawl on the sill. Some of these hands they almost
recognize. Finally, there are sirens,
a kind of music. Night falls

and the boys climb in the searchlights, practicing
for the final ascent. The men directing the beams
caressing them with the incredulity

boys feel when a fly is caught finally in the fist
after a thousand times trying. The grownups
bundled into lawn chairs, drink coffee. 

The boys hang like spiders and sleep, and all night
the lights caress them as the grownups watch.
At dawn, the boys of summer rise and climb again.

They are not hungry. They go slower now. There is,
between them, something invisible. Forgetting
the ropes, they stare at each story with the calculated

glances of serious climbers and they believe
everything they see. They love each other now,
climbing easily, some might say like monkeys,

they have forgotten the feel of the earth flat
underfoot, climbing like this, into autumn,
their working shoulders impossibly beautiful

as they squint, shading their eyes with sunburned fists,
the crowd, catching on, muttering story after story,
as the boys climb, by now, almost a fiction,

too high to be seen clearly. But how they glow 
in their boy's strength and their beauty and their love.
What else would we have them do? They were born for this.

They know it. The crowd thickening below them
as they scramble finally to the gravelly roof
and stand, stretching they still, for one moment

before they leap, each of them, or fly, in almost
perfect swan dives, and fall 
like stones, or like boys

with the thud of sure premonition to the eventual 
pavement, buckling, and man-made, that has been waiting
all this time, for them, with a deep and perfect gravity. 
 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Saint Stacey

 

                                                                          
            

Thank you Stacey

          Thank you BLM

 
"Black America, we are agents of the eternal."

“I think we came to this earth to save it.”
from "Dear Black America," Tracy K Smith



    [...] it appears as the last enslaved class, as the avenger that completes the task of liberation in the name of generations of the downtrodden.

- fragments from "Theses on the Philosophy of History"

 

Stacey 

Black Lives Matter Gave Joe Biden His Victory

America’s Next Authoritarian Will Be Much More Competent”

Dear Black America: A Letter From Tracy K. Smith

*Warnings of History

Walter Benjamin On the Concept of History /Theses on the Philosophy of History

 


Saturday, November 7, 2020

pure joy


 (Photo via Kamala Harris via Cup of Jo)

For a loss that every other loss fits inside*

 


 

Beckoned


At which point my grief-sounds ricocheted outside of language.

Something like a drifting swarm of bees.

At which point in the tetric silence that followed

I was swarmed by those bees and lost consciousness.

At which point there was no way out for me either.

At which point I carried on in a semicoma, dreaming I was awake,

avoiding friends and puking, plucking stingers from my face and arms.

At which point her voice was pinned to a backdrop of vaporous color.

At which point the crane’s bustles flared.

At which point, coming to, I knew I’d pay the whole flag pull fare.

At which point the driver turned and said it doesn’t need to be

your fault for it to break you.

At which point without any lurching commencement,

he began to play a vulture-bone flute.

At which point I grew old and it was like ripping open the beehive with my hands again.

At which point I conceived a realm more real than life.

At which point there was at least some possibility.

Some possibility, in which I didn’t believe, of being with her once more.

Forrest Gander

*title from Forrest Gander: What It Sounds Like

image: mythologyofblue 

Friday, November 6, 2020

Today the foundations of the world get re-jigged

 

Is the four year reign of horror over yet....almost.
 

had to repost this....

26 February. A drunken mix, police and
soldiers, opened fire on the people.


Today a thousand years of ‘past’ are past.
Today the foundations of the world get re-jigged.
Today
we’re re-cutting our cloth to suit our lives
to the last stitch.

Citizens!

Let’s go
and re-make a topsy-turvy world!


Let the crowds reshape the sky, jewelled!

It’s not cowardice clad in drab military grey,
nor the shouts of the have-nots;
the people thunder like thunder today:
– I believe
in the greatness of human hearts!


Vladimir Mayakovsky | Revolution |

image: Maurice Sendak

also, read this: We Are All Down in the Dumps With Jack and Guy

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

What We Miss


 

 

Who says it's so easy to save a life? In the middle of an interview for
the job you might get you see the cat from the window of the seven-
teenth floor just as he's crossing the street against traffic, just as
you're answering a question about your worst character flaw and lying
that you are too careful. What if you keep seeing the cat at every
moment you are unable to save him? Failure is more like this than like
duels and marathons. Everything can be saved, and bad timing pre-
vents it. Every minute, you are answering the question and looking
out the window of the church to see your one great love blinded by
the glare, crossing the street, alone. 

 

Sarah Manguso 

image: Leanne Shapton

A Gallery of Hesitation

A Sketchbook by Leanne Shapton depicts unpurchased items from her eBay and Etsy watch lists, including WWII Sheepskin Aviator Pants: “I can’t spend $350 on sheepskin aviator pants.” See the 1950s Wiggle Dress, the Hand-Knit Pom-Pom Hat, the 1970s Speedo, and more on newyorker.com.

the promise

 



image: John Berger, And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos

Thursday, October 22, 2020

Sit down, We have a heart for you to forget.

 


    The mind makes its daily pilgrimage
    Through riff-raff moments. Then,
    Back into the caprice case to dream
    In a circle, a pony goes round.
    The circle's association: There's a center
    To almost everything but never
    Any certainty. Nothing is
    More malleable than a moment. We were
    Only yesterday breathing in a sea.
    Some summer sun
    Asked us over and over we went. The sand was hot.
    We were only yesterday tender hearted
    Waiting. To be something.
    A spring. And then someone says, Sit down,
    We have a heart for you to forget.
A mind to suffer
    With. So, experience. So, the circus tent.


from: February Elegy, Mary Jo Bang
image:Leonhard Kätzel, Journal of Nobody

what the living do

  

 “We chase after ghosts and spirits and are left holding only memories and dreams. It’s not that we want what we can’t have; it’s that we’ve held all we could want and then had to watch it slip away.”
 - Charles de Lint

 

here
image

title from What the Living Do,

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

my son died suddenly yesterday. "I hear no one like him All at once his dimmed note carried on rivering air sounds through me."

 

 


 



      Few could find him there

                        But that dark Fate

who has nothing to say for us

            suddenly all inspired

                        sings him into the storm 

of his uproarious world

            I hear no one like him

                        All at once

his dimmed note

            carried on rivering air

                        sounds through me.

                   

from the Sixth Elegy

Duino Elegies, Rilke 

translated by David Young                    

 

            

 

                                              

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Teaching a Stone to Talk

 

 
I alternate between thinking of the planet as home - dear and familiar stone hearth and garden - and as a hard land of exile in which we are all sojourners.*

 

What happens to us
Is irrelevant to the world's geology
But what happens to the world's geology
Is not irrelevant to us.
We must reconcile ourselves to the stones,
Not the stones to us.**

 

*Annie Dillard, Teaching a Stone to Talk: Expeditions and Encounters
 
**Hugh McDiarmid, Selected Poems, eds., Alan Riach and Michael Grieve (Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1992), 183.
 

melting glaciers/image

Monday, October 19, 2020

“The first step, I think… is to make us love the world rather than to make us fear for the end of the world."

  



 
 

Gary Snyder once said he didn’t think talking about “doom scenarios” were very effective when it comes to changing people’s behavior.  “The first step, I think… is to make us love the world rather than to make us fear for the end of the world. Make us love the world… and then begin to take better care of it.” 

link 

Posters: The VOTE poster is a collaboration of Lena Wolff and Lexi Visco. Download and print your own!...from Reading My Tea Leaves

Monday, October 12, 2020

the possibility of a new world yet to be born

 

I spring into action

Like everything else, this too shall pass. The truly revelatory content of our apocalyptic fictions is that the world is always ending, has always been ending, just as we are always dying—we spend our lives caught in the doorway between death and birth. There is no solution to the riddle of existence, nor to the inevitable fact of extinction: no amount of sophistication can ultimately justify the suffering that is being. All we have is compassion, patience, and the recognition that every possible human future begins with the end of what came before.
Insofar as apophatic futurism rejects all the spurious fictions of apocalypse … it remains committed to the possibility of a new world yet to be born.*

 

"Part of the great political crisis we face in the world today is a failure to imagine plausible desirable futures. We are surrounded by nostalgic visions, violently nostalgic visions. Fiction can imagine differently.... We certainly need it now. Because if we can’t imagine desirable futures for ourselves that stand a chance of actually coming to pass, our collective depression could well condemn humanity to a period of terrible savagery."**

 
"The best thing about time passing is the privilege of running out of it, of watching the wave of mortality break over me and everyone I know. No more time, no more potential. The privilege of ruling things out. Finishing. Knowing I'm finished. And knowing time will go on without me.

Look at me, dancing my little dance for a few moments against the background of eternity."***
 
 
LINKS

image: Maira Kalman, Principles of Uncertainty 

 *Beginning With the End, Roy Scranton

** New Yorker interview on Exit West

 Mohsin Hamid 

*** Sarah Manguso
Ongoingness: The End of a Diary

Saturday, October 10, 2020

my kingdom for a horse

 
 

"Trump looks oddly like President Andrew Johnson [...]. He wanted to reclaim the nation for white men. Convinced he was defending America from a mob and that his supporters must retake control of the government in the midterm election of 1866 or the nation was finished, Johnson became increasingly unhinged until he began to compare himself to both the martyred Lincoln and Jesus Christ. He called his congressional opponents traitors who should be executed.

Egged on by the president, white supremacist gangs attacked Black Americans and their white allies, convincing Johnson that his party would sweep the midterms and he would gain control of the government to end Black rights.

Voters heard Johnson, all right. They were horrified by his attacks on the government and the violence he urged. It was an era in which only white men could vote, but even so, they elected to office not Johnson’s white supremacists, but Johnson’s opponents. And they didn’t just elect enough of those reasonable men to control Congress… voters gave them a supermajority."


 Heather Cox Richardson

Friday, October 9, 2020

ghosts: remainders/reminders

 

 


The president tries to deride this city by calling it a ghost town but I think this could be the one truthful claim he has made. Our neighborhoods are filled to brimming with ghosts—nearly 27,000 of them—who we’ll never forget.*

 

 image - A Ghost Story

*reading my tea leaves

future ghosts: Farewell to the White Giants

Thursday, October 8, 2020

Justice is what love looks like in public.

 


What do we call the horror that stretches across our present age like a canopy, a kind of shadow violence, the sort we are all guilty of: violence of the ignored, utterly avoidable variety. The casual violence of cruelty. The violence of poverty, denial, lack of care, of turning our attention away from slow burning fires that we ought to be duty bound to watch and hold in our eyes. We are not innocents here, but shadow men, looking the other way while havoc is wrought in our silence.


[...] to resist is not simply an act of refusal, of holding back against a drowning tide; it is to act totally with love in a world of sinister complicity.

 
Frank O’Hara was right and in “times of crisis we must all decide again and again whom to love.”

 

 

Fatima Bhutto, A World on Fire
 

title quote: Dr. Cornell West 

image: Rumpus Original Poetry: Three Visual Poems by David Joez Villaverde

Wednesday, October 7, 2020

There is no justice without memory.

 


They are begging us, you see, in their wordless way,

To do something, to speak on their behalf

Or at least not to close the door again.

Lost people of Treblinka and Pompeii!

“Save us, save us,” they seem to say,

“Let the god not abandon us

Who have come so far in darkness and in pain.

We too had our lives to live.

You with your light meter and relaxed itinerary,

Let not our naïve labours have been in vain!”

 

James Cone, The Arc of the Universe is Long, By Leslie Takahashi Morris, Chip Roush, Leon E. Spencer

 Black Lives Matter 

...another Black death

poem:from “A Disused Shed in Co. Wexford,” by Derek Mahon 

"It is a slaughter and not just a political dispute.”
former CDC director, Dr. William Foege