Yui-chan Posted April 3, 2007 Report Posted April 3, 2007 National Poetry Month is a celebration of poetry first introduced in 1996 by the Academy of American Poets as a way to increase awareness and appreciation of poetry in the United States. It is celebrated every April. Inspired by the success of Black History Month, held each February, and Women's History Month, held in March, the Academy of American Poets convened a group of publishers, booksellers, librarians, literary organizations, poets, and teachers in 1995 to discuss the need and usefulness of a similar month long holiday to celebrate poetry. You can read more details of the history and celebration of the holiday here... In the mean time, as my own homage to a beautiful and inspiring art form, I would like to once again pass along to the Pen one poem every day for the month of April. These are provided by "Martha" of the April_is Yahoo Group. Index: 1 April - Elegy of Fortinbras, Zbigniew Herbert 2 April - Words for Love, Ted Berrigan 3 April - Anywhere Else, Maggie Dietz 4 April - the mockingbird, Charles Bukowski 5 April - White Apples, Donald Hall 6 April - Song, Adrienne Rich 7 April - Hour, Christian Hawkey 8 April - Death Comes To Me Again, A Girl, Dorianne Laux 9 April - Publication Date, Franz Wright 10 April - The Day Flies Off Without Me, John Stammers 11 April - Johnny Cash in the Afterlife, Bronwen Densmore 12 April - This Heavy Craft, P.K. Page 13 April - All There is to Know About Adolph Eichmann, Leonard Cohen 14 April - Supple Cord, Naomi Shihab Nye 15 April - Waste Land Limericks, Wendy Cope 16 April - you can't be a star in the sky without holy fire, Frank X. Gaspar 17 April - I Imagine The Gods, Jack Gilbert 18 April - Serenade,Terrance Hayes 19 April - from Briggflatts, Basil Bunting Your servant, ~Yui
Yui-chan Posted April 3, 2007 Author Report Posted April 3, 2007 Sunday, April 1, 2007 Elegy of Fortinbras Zbigniew Herbert for C.M. Now that we're alone we can talk prince man to man though you lie on the stairs and see no more than a dead ant nothing but black sun with broken rays I could never think of your hands without smiling and now that they lie on the stone like fallen nests they are as defenceless as before The end is exactly this The hands lie apart The sword lies apart The head apart and the knight's feet in soft slippers You will have a soldier's funeral without having been a soldier the only ritual I am acquainted with a little there will be no candles no singing only cannon-fuses and bursts crepe dragged on the pavement helmets boots artillery horses drums drums I know nothing exquisite those will be my manoeuvres before I start to rule one has to take the city by the neck and shake it a bit Anyhow you had to perish Hamlet you were not for life you believed in crystal notions not in human clay always twitching as if asleep you hunted chimeras wolfishly you crunched the air only to vomit you knew no human thing you did not know even how to breathe Now you have peace Hamlet you accomplished what you had to and you have peace The rest is not silence but belongs to me you chose the easier part an elegant thrust but what is heroic death compared with eternal watching with a cold apple in one's hand on a narrow chair with a view of the ant-hill and the clock's dial Adieu prince I have tasks a sewer project and a decree on prostitutes and beggars I must also elaborate a better system of prisons since as you justly said Denmark is a prison I go to my affairs This night is born a star named Hamlet We shall never meet what I shall leave will not be worth a tragedy It is not for us to greet each other or bid farewell we live on archipelagos and that water these words what can they do what can they do prince (translated from Polish by Czeslaw Milosz & Peter Dale Scott) [i love poems that give a fresh perspective to a fictional character, and here Fortinbras, the soldier who shows up at the end of Hamlet, gets to have his say. I love how the lack of punctuation gives this poem a kind of immediacy, and seeing a really pragmatic perspective on what happens after the end of the play, the end of the tragedy, when life goes on, when you're the kind of person who isn't a Hamlet.]
Yui-chan Posted April 3, 2007 Author Report Posted April 3, 2007 Monday, April 2, 2007 Words for Love Ted Berrigan for Sandy Winter crisp and the brittleness of snow as like make me tired as not. I go my myriad ways blundering, bombastic, dragged by a self that can never be still, pushed by my surging blood, my reasoning mind. I am in love with poetry. Every way I turn this, my weakness, smites me. A glass of chocolate milk, head of lettuce, dark- ness of clouds at one o'clock obsess me. I weep for all of these or laugh. By day I sleep, an obscurantist, lost in dreams of lists, compiled by my self for reassurance. Jackson Pollock René Rilke Benedict Arnold I watch my psyche, smile, dream wet dreams, and sigh. At night, awake, high on poems, or pills or simple awe that loveliness exists, my lists flow differently. Of words bright red and black, and blue. Bosky. Oubliette. Dis- severed. And O, alas Time disturbs me. Always minute detail fills me up. It is 12:10 in New York. In Houston it is 2 pm. It is time to steal books. It's time to go mad. It is the day of the apocalpyse the year of parrot fever! What am I saying? Only this. My poems do contain wilde beestes. I write for my Lady of the Lake. My god is immense, and lonely but uncowed. I trust my sanity, and I am proud. If I sometimes grow weary, and seem still, nevertheless my heart still loves, will break. MORE LIKE THIS: A Certain Slant of Sunlight, Ted Berrigan Red Shift, Ted Berrigan
Yui-chan Posted April 3, 2007 Author Report Posted April 3, 2007 Tuesday, April 3, 2007 Anywhere Else Maggie Dietz How anyone is happy in this country I don't know. Any way you turn there is an edge, and everyone cocks a wind-burned hand over the brow to look out under it. The water flings petticoats of foam against wolf-headed rocks, and multicolored boats moored among others to the weathered pier bob dumb as soldiers. We live on what's beneath us. Dark snake-like birds curl into the water, rise like rose blooms floated in bowls. And every day the riven, mended nets go trolling. A far cry from my unforgotten fields. How is it, then, the boat lamps and the buoy bells dislocate me?-- aching not for home, for something I can't name. As if I could be half- another, as if I've lived someplace I never will. Winter brought greenish bergs to the harbor, floes composed of further waters. And the strange white crows here rode them. A mustached woman poured scalding coffee on the feet of one to free it from the scalloped ice night layered on the sand. It screamed as my lost brother does in dreams, with a creature's anguished hatred. Next morning, it lay in the wheat-colored grass, half-eaten by dogs. Here, shells resembling army helmets wash ashore, and cataracted eyes of horses. The town creaks, the seaward shingles of the dry-faced widows' houses loosen like teeth. A squall will snap a mast in half clean as a bone. Are we not shipwrecked? The gravid sea holds nothing for us--but how we squint out over it, waiting for another sun, for someone else's blessed hour. [seventh line from the end -- "A squall will snap". The sound of that is so fantastic! Try it out loud, slow. And those first two lines, and how this weaves together tangible things, the seashore imagery, with bigger questions about suffering and emotion.]
Yui-chan Posted April 4, 2007 Author Report Posted April 4, 2007 Wednesday, April 4, 2007 the mockingbird Charles Bukowski the mockingbird had been following the cat all summer mocking mocking mocking teasing and cocksure; the cat crawled under rockers on porches tail flashing and said something angry to the mockingbird which I didn't understand. yesterday the cat walked calmly up the driveway with the mockingbird alive in its mouth, wings fanned, beautiful wings fanned and flopping, feathers parted like a woman's legs, and the bird was no longer mocking, it was asking, it was praying but the cat striding down through centuries would not listen. I saw it crawl under a yellow car with the bird to bargain it to another place. summer was over. [in this class I'm taking, a girl was talking about Bukowski and said apologetically, "I know he's kind of cliche," and my professor said, "we should all be so lucky." True! I think he can be hit-or-miss, but this is so on: "it was asking, it was praying," and bargain as a verb at the end there. Really effective with so few words.]
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Thursday, April 5, 2007 White Apples Donald Hall when my father had been dead a week I woke with his voice in my ear I sat up in bed and held my breath and stared at the pale closed door white apples and the taste of stone if he called again I would put on my coat and galoshes [i saw Donald Hall at a reading last year, a few weeks before he was named poet laureate and he was funny and charming. He said he thinks this poem works because of the "st" sound at the end of taste and beginning of stone: "That's what lifts a poem, makes it get off the ground a little." I like how it's kind of a stuttering sound, which seems to match the theme -- the interruptions of death, and being suddenly woken. And "white apples and the taste of stone" -- how it calls to mind graveyards without quite explaining itself.] More like this: To a Waterfowl, Donald Hall My Mother Said, Donald Hall Names of Horses, Donald Hall
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Friday, April 6, 2007 Song Adrienne Rich You're wondering if I'm lonely: OK then, yes, I'm lonely as a plane rides lonely and level on its radio beam, aiming across the Rockies for the blue-strung aisles of an airfield on the ocean. You want to ask, am I lonely? Well, of course, lonely as a woman driving across country day after day, leaving behind mile after mile little towns she might have stopped and lived and died in, lonely If I'm lonely it must be the loneliness of waking first, of breathing dawn's first cold breath on the city of being the one awake in a house wrapped in sleep If I'm lonely it's with the rowboat ice-fast on the shore in the last red light of the year that knows what it is, that knows it's neither ice nor mud nor winter light but wood, with a gift for burning. [i love this, because it's a topic that seems like it should make for bad teenage poetry, and instead it's so fantastic -- the conversational tone, the images, the rowboat that saves the poem from wallowing with its strong sense of identity. (How many self-assured rowboats did you think you'd read about today?) And the last line!] More like this: Diving into the Wreck, Adrienne Rich Dear Adrienne, Adrienne Rich Miracle Ice Cream, Adrienne Rich
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Saturday, April 7, 2007 Hour Christian Hawkey My sixth sensurround is down, my second skin the skin I'm stepping into: I lick a new finger & hold it up to the wind: O my beloved what. O my beloved what. O my beloved shovel-nosed mole can I clean the soil from your black, sightless eyes can I massage with fine oils your tiny, webbed feet are you tired of running into drainpipes does your mouth foam approaching power lines are your tunnels collapsing do you have work to do does the dirt breathe do you breathe the air between the dirt are your lungs the size of earlobes do you hear me in the tunnel next to you have you cut your nose on a shard of glass have you excavated the severed, blue leg of Spider-Man did you pause to admire his red booties are you tunnels collapsing do you have work to do am I keeping you am I keeping you [i think one of the worst holdovers from English classes is the idea that you should *understand* everything going on in a poem right away, when poetry is awesome because it's the one thing that's allowed to function on other levels: how it sounds, how it looks, how it can catch you up in its images or language even if it doesn't seem to make sense. I have no idea what on earth is going on at the beginning of this poem and I love it anyway. Maybe because of it.] More like this: Four poems by Christian Hawkey A Dead Mole, Andrew Young
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Sunday, April 8, 2007 Death Comes To Me Again, A Girl Dorianne Laux Death comes to me again, a girl in a cotton slip, barefoot, giggling. It's not so terrible she tells me, not like you think, all darkness and silence. There are windchimes and the smell of lemons, some days it rains, but more often the air is dry and sweet. I sit beneath the staircase built from hair and bone and listen to the voices of the living. I like it, she says, shaking the dust from her hair, especially when they fight, and when they sing. [Has Dorianne Laux been reading Neil Gaiman? I like this because it tells a story and uses details so well.] More like this: Antilamentation, Dorianne Laux
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Monday, April 9, 2007 Publication Date by Franz Wright One of the few pleasures of writing is the thought of one's book in the hands of a kindhearted intelligent person somewhere. I can't remember what the others are right now. I just noticed that it is my own private National I Hate Myself and Want to Die Day (which means the next day I will love my life and want to live forever). The forecast calls for a cold night in Boston all morning and all afternoon. They say tomorrow will be just like today, only different. I'm in the cemetery now at the edge of town, how did I get here? A sparrow limps past on its little bone crutch saying I am Federico García Lorca risen from the dead -- literature will lose, sunlight will win, don't worry. More like this: My Place, Franz Wright The Street, Franz Wright A Supermarket in California, Allen Ginsberg
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Tuesday, April 10, 2007 The Day Flies Off Without Me John Stammers The planes bound for all points everywhere etch lines on my office window. From the top floor London recedes in all directions, and beyond: the world with its teeming hearts. I am still, you move, I am a point of reference on a map; I am at zero meridian as you consume the longitudes. The pact we made to read our farewells exactly at two in the afternoon with you in the air holds me like a heavy winter coat. Your unopened letter is in my pocket, beating. [i love the sense of motion and sprawl and expansion in the whole poem, and how it packs in so many fantastic lines: "the world with its teeming hearts" and that last line, especially.] More like this: I Don't 'Go Organic' Often, but When I Do, John Stammers The Taxi, Amy Lowell
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Wednesday, April 11, 2007 Johnny Cash in the Afterlife Bronwen Densmore At first you wonder where June has got to and then you manage to forget the circumstance of your own arrival. Prior to here you were where? Suffice to say that you were finished with some task or another. Around the corner something flutters and you'd chase it if you were feeling your old self, though right now you're not sure what you'd do with something living if you caught it. You hunker down and keep an eye out, remember how when you were a boy you trapped rabbits in a baited net and waited for your father, who killed them with just his thumb and two fingers. You are forgetting the names of these things already. You would like to describe wings beating as warm, and possessed of smell, but when you open your mouth it's just air getting out, you think screen door, and when sound finally comes it seems animal to you. If your wife were here you might put your ear to her and know better but for now it's just you and the whoosh, whoosh of that shadow. If you wrote it down it might come back but you don't mind, not sure you really want it now. For all you know it could have been owls you were tracking back then, as a boy, baskets that you wove to keep them in. [i am such a sucker for what-if poems, story poems, and second person. And I love how centering this on Johnny Cash and those kinds of boyhood memories means there's no chance of it becoming overly precious. I really like the drift of this, how things get vaguer and vaguer as the poem goes along, how language itself seems to be fading.] More like this: Mummingbird, Bronwen Densmore The Heaven of Animals, James Dickey
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Thursday, April 12, 2007 This Heavy Craft P.K. Page The wax has melted but the dream of flight persists. I, Icarus, though grounded in my flesh have one bright section in me where a bird night after starry night while I'm asleep unfolds its phantom wings and practices. [The Icarus myth is a subject poets looove -- I bet you could easily publish a whole collection of Icarus poems. This one's a little less well-known, I think, and I like it for its brevity and how it makes Icarus the speaker, not just a subject for someone else to talk about.] More like this: Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, William Carlos Williams Failing and Flying, Jack Gilbert Icarus, Christine Hemp Musee des Beaux Arts, W.H. Auden
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Friday, April 13, 2007 All There is to Know About Adolph Eichmann Leonard Cohen EYES: Medium HAIR: Medium WEIGHT: Medium HEIGHT: Medium DISTINGUISHING FEATURES: None NUMBER OF FINGERS: Ten NUMBER OF TOES: Ten INTELLIGENCE: Medium What did you expect? Talons? Oversize incisors? Green saliva? Madness? [Adolph Eichmann, of course, is Hitler.]* More like this: Hitler's First Photograph, Wislawa Szymborska Ovid in the Third Reich, Geoffrey Hill * Actually, Adolph Eichmann is not Hitler, though he was a high-ranking SS officer. Details are available on Wikipedia.
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Saturday, April 14, 2007 Supple Cord Naomi Shihab Nye My brother, in his small white bed, held one end. I tugged the other to signal I was still awake. We could have spoken, could have sung to one another, we were in the same room for five years, but the soft cord with its little frayed ends connected us in the dark, gave comfort even if we had been bickering all day. When he fell asleep first and his end of the cord dropped to the floor, I missed him terribly, though I could hear his even breath and we had such long and separate lives ahead. [Correction from yesterday: Adolph Eichmann was an SS officer. Oops.]
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Sunday, April 15, 2007 Waste Land Limericks Wendy Cope I In April one seldom feels cheerful; Dry stones, sun and dust make me fearful; Clairvoyantes distress me, Commuters depress me-- Met Stetson and gave him an earful. II She sat on a mighty fine chair, Sparks flew as she tidied her hair; She asks many questions, I make few suggestions- - Bad as Albert and Lil--what a pair! III The Thames runs, bones rattle, rats creep; Tiresias fancies a peep-- A typist is laid, A record is played-- Wei la la. After this it gets deep. IV A Phoenician named Phlebas forgot About birds and his business--the lot, Which is no surprise, Since he'd met his demise And been left in the ocean to rot. V No water. Dry rocks and dry throats, Then thunder, a shower of quotes From the Sanskrit and Dante. Da. Damyata. Shantih. I hope you'll make sense of the notes. [T.S. Eliot's long, dense poem The Waste Land retold in limericks! Ha!] More like this: A Nursery Rhyme [as it might have been written byT.S. Eliot], Wendy Cope
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Monday, April 16, 2007 you can't be a star in the sky without holy fire Frank X. Gaspar Why should I keep telling you what I love, and whom? I am so dull and awkward, what difference would it make? Yet I can't shut up. I'm like that mockingbird up on the bee-riddled pole at the corner of our easement. He is de- mented, singing I must have sex, singing stay away from me. Every once in a while he does a little hip-hop, he flaps his wings, he does a break-down. When does he breathe? When does he sleep? And beneath him are the morning-glories, who could teach me a thing or two about the absolute rage to live, and also the trumpet-vine, which is serene and alluring, but which is all muscle and will underneath. And the wisteria! You would stand naked in the snow-white shower of its blossoms, but it would send a root down through you and plant a stake in your heart. No, I can't shut up, it's not in my nature, just as beauty is not, just as all those virtues I read about have gone missing. And I don't want everyone to gather round either. In another world I am ready to lie down in solidarity with all the doomed blossoms along the white fences. In another world I would stop grinding my own bones. In another world I would convert all my failures and consume them in a holy fire. But then there is that mindless bird – he can't shut up – and it's one world only, and he knows it. More like this: Bright Wings, Frank X. Gaspar
Yui-chan Posted April 17, 2007 Author Report Posted April 17, 2007 Tuesday, April 17, 2007 Today's post is a guest entry by Mairead, who has excellent taste in poetry and other important things. I Imagine The Gods by Jack Gilbert I imagine the gods saying, We will make it up to you. We will give you three wishes, they say. Let me see the squirrels again, I tell them. Let me eat some of the great hog stuffed and roasted on its giant spit and put out, steaming, into the winter of my neighborhood when I was usually too broke to afford even the hundred grams I ate so happily walking up the cobbles, past the Street of the Moon and the Street of the Birdcage-Makers, the Street of Silence and the Street of the Little Pissing. We can give you wisdom, they say in their rich voices. Let me go at last to Hugette, I say, the Algerian student with her huge eyes who timidly invited me to her room when I was too young and bewildered that first year in Paris. Let me at least fail at my life. Think, they say patiently, we could make you famous again. Let me fall in love one last time, I beg them. Teach me mortality, frighten me into the present. Help me to find the heft of these days. That the nights will be full enough and my heart feral. [i love Gilbert for his wisdom and the simple beauty of his voice; lines like "Let me at least fail at my life" and "Help me to find / the heft of these days" also have an elegance to their sound that gets stuck in my head. This is from his third (of only four) books, written when he was in his late sixties, and there's longing in this poem, I think, an urgency to maintain the immediacy of youth. Anyone lucky enough to get their hands on his most recent book, Refusing Heaven, should also read "Bring in the Gods," in which he confronts the same questions with another decade's wisdom: "I want to fail. I am hungry / for what I am becoming."] More like this: The Abnormal Is Not Courage, Jack Gilbert In Umbria, Jack Gilbert A Brief for the Defense, Jack Gilbert (& more like that)
Yui-chan Posted April 18, 2007 Author Report Posted April 18, 2007 Wednesday, April 18, 2007 Serenade Terrance Hayes I want to always sleep beneath a bright red blanket of leaves. I want to never wear a coat of ice. I want to learn to walk without blinking. I want to learn the language of a Chilean poet. I want to say God & fuck you & touch me without blinking. I want to outlive the turtle & the turtle's father, the stone. I want a mouth full of permissions & a pink glistening bud. If the wildflower & ant hill can return after sleeping three seasons, I want to walk out of this house wearing nothing but wind. I want to greet you, I want to wait for the bus with you weighing less than a chill. I want to fight off the bolts of gray lighting the alcoves & winding paths of your hair. I want to fight off the damp nudgings of snow. I want to fight off the wind. I want to be the wind & I want to fight off the wind with its sagging banner of isolation, its swinging screen doors, its gilded boxes, & neatly folded pamphlets of noise. I want to fight off the dull straight lines of two by fours & endings, your disapprovals, your doubts & regulations, your carbon copies. If the locust can abandon its suit, I want a brand new name. I want the pepper's fury & the salt's tenderness. I want the eight-sided passion of sugar, but not its need. I want the virtue of the evening rain, but not its gossip. I want the moon's intuition, but not its questions. I want the malice of nothing on earth. I want to enter every room in a strange electrified city & find you there. I want your lips around the bell of flesh at the bottom of my ear. I want to be the mirror, but not the nightstand. I do not want to be the light switch. I do not want to be the yellow photograph or book of poems. When I leave this body, Woman, I want to be pure flame and song. I want to be your breath. More like this: The Same City, Terrance Hayes Shafro, Terrance Hayes Clarinet, Terrance Hayes
Yui-chan Posted April 19, 2007 Author Report Posted April 19, 2007 Thursday, 19 April, 2007 from Briggflatts Basil Bunting Furthest, fairest things, stars, free of our humbug, each his own, the longer known the more alone, wrapt in emphatic fire roaring out to a black flue. Each spark trills on a tone beyond chronological compass, yet in a sextant's bubble present and firm places a surveyor's stone or steadies a tiller. Then is Now. The star you steer by is gone, its tremulous thread spun in the hurricane spider floss on my check; light from the zenith spun when the slowworm lay in her lap fifty years ago. The sheets are gathered and bound, the volume indexed and shelved, dust on its marbled leaves. Lofty, an empty combe, silent but for bees. Finger tips touched and were still fifty years ago. Sirius is too young to remember. Sirius glows in the wind. Sparks on ripples mark his line, lures for spent fish. Fifty years a letter unanswered; a visit postponed for fifty years. She has been with me fifty years. Starlight quivers. I had day enough. For love uninterrupted night. [This is the very end of Briggflatts, Basil Bunting's long, autobiographical poem about a girl he loved and left. Bunting was really into poetry as an audible, spoken art form, so all the sounds he uses are very deliberate, and grounded in the accent of Northern England (he had some hilariously strong views on the loss of the letter 'r' in Southern accents). You can hear him reading a different poem, "At Briggflatts meetinghouse," here to get a sense of it. He said: "Poetry, like music, is to be heard. It deals in sound... Reading in silence is the source of half the misconceptions that have caused the public to distrust poetry." Also he was a SPY!] More like this: What the Chairman Told Tom, Basil Bunting To Tanya on my Sixtieth Birthday, Wendell Berry
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