Soon, you hope— emergence of spring's
first blooms. Not having to put on
a coat just to take out the trash. Thermostats
no longer clicking on and off. Green
restored bit by bit above drab avenues:
merciful masking of where branches
were pruned and threaded with power
lines. How to revive the stem bent
at the nape, desultory in its old brown
wrapper? You want to slip your arms
into sleeves of seagreen foam, your feet
into a basin pearled and cooling
after light rain; your teeth into the tart-sweet
interval of fruit on the way to ripening.
Lay-by
At the office all the morning; dined at home, and poor Mr. Wood with me, who after dinner would have borrowed money of me, but I would lend none. Then to Whitehall by coach with Sir W. Pen, where we did very little business, and so back to Mr. Rawlinson’s, where I took him and gave him a cup of wine, he having formerly known Mr. Rawlinson, and here I met my uncle Wight, and he drank with us, and with him to Sir W. Batten’s, whither I sent for my wife, and we chose Valentines against to-morrow. My wife chose me, which did much please me; my Lady Batten Sir W. Pen, &c. Here we sat late, and so home to bed, having got my Lady Batten to give me a spoonful of honey for my cold.
a poor wood with one
little sin in a cup
for me
for my wife
a tine against my pen
and a spoonful of honey
for my cold
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Wednesday 13 February 1660/61.
On Suffering
"I draw the line at pain."
~ Hiromi Ito
Past my sixth decade, and I still don't know
how others do it— take cruises and splendid
annual vacations, lavish their offspring with sleek
investment accounts; talk about how they retired
and now spend their days wine-tasting and living
their best life. For class, I had my students read
a life thinly disguised as novel: autofiction,
critics call it—in which the narrator flies back
and forth between her home in California and her home
in Japan. On one hand, there's an aging, cantankerous
husband and on the other, parents in serious decline.
In between, pilgrimages to figure out her own unhappiness,
her children's unhappiness. Their dog is hit by a car; it
survives, but now it's lame—In this way, perhaps it took on
its owners' suffering by offering itself as substitute.
Can you believe such a thing? But I know the ache of both
wringing my hands in helplessness, and wanting to help.
The wind gusts. And yes, the trees stay unchanged.
Dining Car
Along the circuits of the body, trains run carrying their load of minerals and waste, constant electricity, surpluses of sugar, salt and bile. As the body wears down, they run on schedules that won't always stay consistent—they'll need repair, replacement, a slick of oil, a suturing. You feed the body oranges, bread barely streaked with butter; beans, onions, and soup. But sometimes in the night, you remember those stops open 24 hours selling beer and ham sandwiches, wheels of cheese, slices of cake drenched in cream— everything gleaming in cool refrigerator light.
Poetry Blog Digest 2024, Week 6
A personal selection of posts from the Poetry Blogging Network and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the blog digest archive, subscribe to its RSS feed in your favorite feed reader, or, if you’d like it in your inbox, subscribe on Substack.
This week: love and chocolate, the return of light, bringing scarecrows to life, the cost of beauty, and much more. Enjoy,
Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2024, Week 6”Meal
To my Lord’s, and there with him all the morning, and then (he going out to dinner) I and Mr. Pickering, Creed, and Captain Ferrers to the Leg in the Palace to dinner, where strange Pickering’s impertinences. Thence the two others and I after a great dispute whither to go, we went by water to Salsbury Court play-house, where not liking to sit, we went out again, and by coach to the Theatre, and there saw “The Scornfull Lady,” now done by a woman, which makes the play appear much better than ever it did to me. Then Creed and I (the other being lost in the crowd) to drink a cup of ale at Temple Bar, and there we parted, and I (seeing my father and mother by the way) went home.
going out to dinner
we ate to eat
her full pear
her lost temple
and I
seeing her home
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 12 February 1660/61.
Records
There's nearly an entire month you can't account for, when (you were told) you were confined in the hospital. First or second grade, scabby-kneed, hard to feed, breaking out in hives and blisters; nose bleeds almost every day. Confine—a word that only brings up images of a high bed with a metal frame; a drafty room, the old-building smell (like yellow piss, like peeling paint and antiseptic. Nurses came at intervals to check your temperature or bring a glass of water to your lips, bitter liquid in little dosage cups. In the hallways, the sound of wheels rolling across tile. Years later this is the same hospital where you give birth to your third child— every single time the resident pushed her thick fingers in to check the progress of dilation, she'd say 2 cm. Unreal. It's the same hospital where your father passed away on a makeshift pallet, the walls having collapsed in the aftermath of earthquake. You can't remember how many days and nights there was no running water, no power, no gas, no telephone service. A drama of tents sprang up in parks. There was rain and mud, and makeshift stoves into which you pushed torn newspapers. Box of matches, black- bottomed pot from the ruined kitchen; tins of sardines, can opener. Grocers handing out bread through a hole in the wall. Flies led rescue teams to bodies. The dead got their coffins. For such things, there are actually records.
Head-in-Sand Ritual
uncanny heat
for the tenth of February
but the creek’s trickle still hits
the right notes after dark
the evening jets rumble
somewhere out of mind
i disturb a sparrow
in the juniper tree
that holds my house close
to its accretionary trunk
and the fluttering of wings
where a heart would beat
tells me to go bury my head
under the blankets
to bed down with the radio
dead air hissing in my ear
and dream a killing floor
of windblown sand
where pump jacks raise
and lower their horse heads
and flare stacks
burn eternally
for unknown soldiers
it’s essential to keep
the necromance young
the lovely refrigerator
humming in my kitchen
depends on it
and the space heater
and the halloween ladybugs
awakening in the walls
too early
with a burning thirst
Gone for a Soldier
At the office all the morning. Dined at home, and then to the Exchange, and took Mr. Warren with me to Mr. Kennard, the master joiner, at Whitehall, who was at a tavern, and there he and I to him, and agreed about getting some of my Lord’s deals on board to-morrow.
Then with young Mr. Reeve home to his house, who did there show me many pretty pleasures in perspectives, that I have not seen before, and I did buy a little glass of him cost me 5s. And so to Mr. Crew’s, and with Mr. Moore to see how my father and mother did, and so with him to Mr. Adam Chard’s (the first time I ever was at his house since he was married) to drink, then we parted, and I home to my study, and set some papers and money in order, and so to bed.
a war to join
you show me
many pleasures
I have not seen
a little glass
of hard drink
then home
to my paper order
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 11 February 1660/61.
Cedrus Deodara
Beneath the tree whose branches are garlanded with bits of paper covered with now indecipherable handwriting, we gather to string letters, wishes, poems. Its name in Sanskrit means wood of the gods. The sky, azure after a cloudy morning, peeps through a latticework of branches. It must be indeed patient and forbearing: letting us transfer our supplications to its arms.

