Archive for 2011

dVerse Poetics-Marlowe Revisited – Christopher not Phillip

October 13, 2011

The wonderful and very supportive dVerse Poets Pub  suggests as a poetics prompt today that one imitate an admired poet.  As host to the prompt, Victoria gives a great personalized version of the wonderful Wallace Stevens Thirteen Ways of Looking At A Blackbird.  I would love to try my hand at Wallace Stevens, but shortness of time  and several days into the long distance part of a long-distance relationship lead me instead to Christopher Marlowe, a poet  whom I  love and whose work I’ve already imitated.   This is based on the wonderful  “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love”. (“Come live with me and be my love.”)

A Passionate Long-Distance Caller To Her Love

Come live with me, my sweet, my dear,
and we shall never echoes hear
of anxious longing, fearful cries,
of ‘why me?‘ woes or angry lies–
our ears won’t burn with cellphone’s ray,
our brains won’t morph their matters gray
into tumors fed by conversations
that only serve to try our patience.
Oh please come here; stay right by me
so I can see you when I see
the sky, the window, the chair, the bed.
the pillow there beside my head,
for you are all to me and more,
my sun, my moon, my ceiling, floor,
the one I talk to, the one
for whom I’d be still–sweet Hon,
I know my silence is not much known–
I can’t quite manage it on the phone–
but come here soon and stay forever
and we’ll lay quietly together.

 

 

(Apologies to those who’ve read this poem before; it is edited a bit!  I will try some Wallace Stevens soon.)

On the Political Side – Doing Something To Nudge Do-Nothings

October 12, 2011

Pearl's Wants To Help With All the Emails

As followers of this blog know, I’ve been writing a lot about poetry lately. (Even really morbid poetry is a lot easier to stomach than current politics.) But it’s pretty hard to pass up commenting on the congressional Republicans’ recent  squelching of all debate on President Obama’s Jobs Act.

It’s ridiculous. The nixing of even debate suggests that congressional Republicans are out for the political jugular without regard to the fact that it IS, in fact, attached to the body politic.

Is governing all about election?  The old tack was to characterize Obama as a rammer of legislation down the country’s throat;  now they are ascribing their own implacable obstructionism to Obama’s lack of leadership.  (Amazingly, the characterization of Obama veers between Attila the Hun and Professor Milquetoast).   (I admit that Obama could be a more active leader, but their conduct makes it seem that it would hardly make a difference.)

So here is what I, a lowly non-pol who really doesn’t feel like sitting in Zucotti Park, thought I might do:  write!   To as many congressmen and senators as I can bear, even those outside my district.  I know that it’s unlikely to do any good.  When John Boehner sees, for example, that I am not from Ohio, he will probably not take my email very seriously. Still, writing it makes ME feel better.

P.S. I’m going for  polite measured little notes.  I realize it might help if I included a picture of Pearl, above–at least that might get passed around the Congressional office.  But so far, I’ve kept Pearl above the fray, except as proofreader.

To Drafts! Revisions! Community! Poetry! Wine!

October 12, 2011

Drafts!

Kind of a funny evening after a very tense day.  The tension I think was chemical–well, partly–modern life is so so busy it makes for tension even in the near comatose.  (Also, in this day and age, if you are lucky enough to be employed, you tend to have an awful lot to do.)  But I also took an herb this morning, Gingko Biloba, which is meant to protect against brain dulling, but I think, in my case, may have caused brain hypersensitivity.

Then came the evening, which was subsumed in several long and worrisome telephone calls.  The great part of having aging parents is having aging parents; the difficult part is having aging parents.  The great certainly far outweighs the difficult, but where there is a significant risk of loss, there is the significant fear of loss.

And then, for some reason, I started looking through old draft poems that are on this blog, but virtually in no other file of mine.  Although I spent some energy on the drafts on the days I wrote each of them, I then virtually forgot about most of them, never refining, editing or even looking at them.

But tonight, perhaps because I should be working overtime on something else, all those unfinished poems suddenly beckoned.

Partly, this interest in old drafts has been sparked by my recent involvement in various online poetry websites and blogs, which really has been very inspiring.

The  glass of wine I had with dinner also seemed to make the call of these old draft poems somewhat more eloquent.

Still!  To old notebooks!  Drafts! Unfinished manuscripts!  Poetry blogs!   (Here here!)

Young Palm – Adult Child

October 11, 2011

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I am posting the new poem below for the dVerse Poets Pub “Open Link” night and also for Gooseberry Garden’s poetry picnic.

Adult Child

It seemed to her walking on a beachside street
near the home of aging parents
that she saw in the five feet
of a young palm, the slightly goofy grace
of a fawn or baby giraffe:
in the ridges of green trunk–
knock-knees; in the froth of
lime green frond–the soft bristle of
first-sprout hair; overall a sense of oversized
hooves, paws, the floppy underfooting of
fledgling wonder.

Yet even as she held the young palm
in the back of her mind, another childishness
crept to the forefront–a child’s
fear of death–not fear of the unknown, or
even loss, but of moist brown earth,
clods of non-human
clay, the closing-in of lonely terrible cold; a fear of death that does not
truly believe in death but does know darkness.

It clung to her through the visit
until, at the shore itself, after they had tossed in
a rough sea, which, in the power of that fear, was
almost intolerable to her, and her husband passed
a towel over the brilliance beading their skin,
she could not stop herself from reaching back to him
and whispering, oh please
don’t let me be buried
, and he, confused,
wrapped strong limbs (a Northern person, he is so unlike a palm) around
her trunk, softly kissing and trying jokes, till she said again, please and
promise, and he did.

Then, determined to cast off the still-stalking fear, she darted awkwardly
to the surf and willed herself into a cartwheel
at the edge of the ocean-firmed sand, and when that one worked, another, and
another again, knowing that one cannot will ebullience, but also
that there is nothing
like turning upside down for clearing a head, and
another one, until blinking in the shine, they marveled, before
the next wave, at
the clarity of the palm prints, there, in the wedge of sand and sea,
spread wide, five-fingered.

As always, all rights reserved.

One more tribute to Steve Jobs- iPhoning the Moon.

October 10, 2011

Dear Steve, thank you for catching me the moon.  Thanks for letting me put it in my pocket.

More than than that, thanks for equipping me to somehow see it better.

Yes, I know all about being here and now.  (I know about it as a concept at least)  And I know about the barriers the digital world makes to the real world.  (Very very real barriers that can definitely get into this woman’s way.)

And yet, and yet…when I look at that moon with iPhone in hand, I really do look at it.  And yes, I know I could have done that through a regular camera, but I never did.

And now I do.  I joyously ponder and snap pictures of the moon on the same implement that was just used to speak repeatedly to the woman who’s helping my aging parents (my dad fell, but he’s okay), the same implement just used to send emails to my boss (no, I didn’t finish everything I planned)  and the same implement used to check the exact name of Rilke’s wonderful poem ” The Lay of the Life and Death of the Cornet Christopher Rilke,” which reminds me of Rilke’s beautiful descriptions of soldiers’ faces as they speak of home, and, well, somehow, I find myself taking even more pictures of the moon, and really really valuing then.

So, thank you, Steve, and goodnight, Moon.

“Philosophical” (Ha!) Autumn Haiku

October 9, 2011

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What is real? What is
reflection? One way to know
for sure: take a plunge.

Bumper Sticker Poem (Live Free or Die?) (Thinking of Germany and Bad Times)

October 8, 2011

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This is a fresh-off-the-brain-press poem written for dVerse Poets Pub poetics prompt.  Today, it is to write something inspired by a bumper sticker.

So What if You Really Did Live in Germany in the 1930’s?

‘Live free or die’
easy enough to sigh
‘let me be me’
when it’s not really a choice
of to be or not to be,
but the voicing of
a complaint, the price
of sainted gas
is too damn–
(
kind of half-assed,
if important in its way),
but what if your neighbor,
even the guy you’re sore at,
who plays the tuba at two,
and happens to be a Jew,
is dragged off in the night?
In your window, the light
of a seering torch;
on your porch
the pound of booted step;
and your wife has wept
with fear, your
children so very near,
and you know,
yes, although you know,
it’s terribly wrong,
and you long
(somewhere)
(somehow)
to dare
not to bow
to whatever inner voice
now says, the choice
is not your own.
Okay, you’ve got a gun
but you’ve also got
a son, and
they’ve taken his,
that neighbor–who–
he had one too–
not yours,
yours, who purrs
as he sleeps,
you see the peeps
of dreams beneath his eyelids–
what do you do then?

Unexpectedly reminded of one of my favorite books today – Sorry, Charlotte!

October 7, 2011

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Evening on a Train (With Variations of 17 Syllables)

October 6, 2011

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DVerse Poets Pub (dversepoets.com) is hosting a “form for all” night on the haiku and senryu forms (meaning that they are encouraging participant bloggers to write and post their individual efforts with these forms.) DVerse host, Gay Reiser Cannon also has a wonderful exposition on the differences of the forms.

Haikus are not somehow my favorite form. (I tend towards the wordy.) Still, I had a few old ones (or maybe they are really senryu) that I thought of posting for this event, but, well, they were written in Florida in the springtime, and I am currently in New York in Autumn, and haiku are by their nature rather seasonal. As a result, here are some new ones. These are not truly autumnal, but there were all written today at least, on a commuter train going up the Hudson River.

It was a long train ride so I wrote a lot of variations of each, but will spare you all the experiments.

Looking Out/In

In the train window,
night shades into looking glass;
a stranger peers in.

Brain Trap

Brain flutters against
bone. Firefly in a jar
is mainly thorax.

Like You Somehow

Mountains darker than
nightfall. Your warmth like, and not
like, a sun-licked stone.

P.S. – I’m not sure you should title haikus–it feels a bit like cheating (extra syllables) but I threw those titles in at the last minute. Hope you like them and thanks, as always, for your time and kindness.

Thankful for Steve Jobs, Tribute to iTunes

October 5, 2011

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