Among the missing

Sam Pepys and me

At the office all the morning, where we had a deputation from the Duke in his absence, he being gone to Portsmouth, for us to have the whole disposal and ordering of the Fleet. In the afternoon about business up and down, and at night to visit Sir R. Slingsby, who is fallen sick of this new disease, an ague and fever. So home after visiting my aunt Wight and Mrs. Norbury (who continues still a very pleasant lady), and to supper, and so to bed.

all the absence in one mouth

who is out at night
who is fallen
who continues


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 22 October 1661.

Ghazal: Indulgence

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
The penitent must perform certain acts besides prayer—
good works and pilgrimages— to receive an indulgence.

Even after forgiveness through confession, you're told
more is needed to restore the soul; hence, the indulgence.

This can sound confusing, even a little bit medieval, especially
when taking into account modern meanings of indulgence.

Even more confusing are those Catholic prayers called ejaculations:
utterances to direct the petitioner's mind to God, not as indulgence—

Eternal rest grant unto us, o Lord. Mother of Mercy, pray for us.
Queen of peace, pray for us
. Do you ever feel prayer can be indulgent,

that it deflects attention away from the present, in favor of an
afterlife? Is there any shrine that isn't even a bit indulgent?

Another hospital has been bombed, another school, another
shelter. Mother of orphans, pray for us even as we indulge

in the privilege of leisure, a good cry, a walk by the sea.
Works of mercy and charity, acts of indulgence—

what's the purgatory of the soul, if this life already cycles between
trial and suffering? O my heart, desirous of grace and indulgence.

Poetry Blog Digest 2024, Week 42

Poetry Blogging Network

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 at Via Negativa or, if you’d like it in your inbox, subscribe on Substack (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).

This week: a head full of dreams, the stillness of a bell, big magic, an impish shadow, and more. Enjoy!

Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2024, Week 42”

Metaphor Means to Carry Over

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Yes, there are likely more times 
that color is only what tinges the curtains,
the paint in these rooms, or the eyes

of your lover. What else is there to think of ?
When you look at a broken bridge, the fire-
ravaged mountain, a flooded town,

yes, they are what they are, but they
are also all the ways in which you feel
fraught. In the impossibility of turning

away from circumstance, you want
to look for a sign, any sign, that fills
the hours with more than just

endlessness. Perhaps it holds out two
hands, and some possibility of choice.

Desolation

Sam Pepys and me

Early with Mr. Moore by coach to Chelsy, to my Lord Privy Seal’s, but have missed of coming time enough; and having taken up Mr. Pargiter, the goldsmith (who is the man of the world that I do most know and believe to be a cheating rogue), we drank our morning draft there together of cake and ale, and did make good sport of his losing so much by the King’s coming in, he having bought much of Crown lands, of which, God forgive me! I am very glad. At Whitehall, at the Privy Seal, did with Sir W. Pen take advice about passing of things of his there that concern his matters of Ireland. Thence to the Wardrobe and dined, and so against my judgment and conscience (which God forgive, for my very heart knows that I offend God in breaking my vows herein) to the Opera, which is now newly begun to act again, after some alteracion of their scene, which do make it very much worse; but the play, “Love and Honour,” being the first time of their acting it, is a very good plot, and well done. So on foot home, and after a little business done in my study and supper, to bed.

I have missed enough
of the world I most believe in

we together losing
the land to war

against conscience my god
my new gun again

some love being
the one business


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 21 October 1661.

Mountaineer

Sam Pepys and me

(Lord’s day). At home in bed all the morning to ease my late tumour, but up to dinner and much offended in mind at a proud trick my man Will hath got, to keep his hat on in the house, but I will not speak of it to him to-day; but I fear I shall be troubled with his pride and laziness, though in other things he is good enough. To church in the afternoon, where a sleepy Presbyter preached, and then to Sir W. Batten who is to go to Portsmouth to-morrow to wait upon the Duke of York, who goes to take possession and to set in order the garrison there. Supped at home and to bed.

at home as a tumor
a man is on the peak

with his pride and the ache
to take possession


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Sunday 20 October 1661.

Letter to You, Fragranced with Rosemary

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Do you watch the color of the sky and how it looks 
from the top of the hill where you live, how quietly

it moves and gathers damson plum and purple
verbena, the grey of doves' breasts, the breathing

of pine forests at night? I know how much we've
all suffered, are suffering still, though we barely speak

of it, or of anything else these days. This evening,
I went into the yard because I wanted to coil

branches of snipped rosemary into a wreath.
When I finished, night had fallen. I could barely see

to the end of the road. My fingers were scratched,
but suffused with such fragrance. Even after

I washed them in the sink, the haze followed me
beyond sleep, touching everything in its wake.

Shape and Substance

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
~ after Diane Seuss ("Coda")


The best donut in a box of store-bought donuts
is not glazed but plain, like a plain-spoken poem.

In the farmer's market, the best donut is the one
which doesn't smell like apple cider or pumpkin

spice. It's the one that isn't dusted with sanding
sugar or a cinnamon-cardamom mix. If it's sweet,

its sweetness lingers like the space where a hole
has been made in something that used to be

whole. In other words, whole doesn't always mean
unbroken, and broken doesn't always mean not good

anymore or of no further use. Sometimes whole is a body
that rose and was punched down once, twice, on the counter

or in a bowl. Whole means strands of gluten broken
down, souring in fermentation, then knit back together

to form an elastic structure. Tap it with a knife or your
finger. It's crisp and golden outside, soft on the inside.

Ancestral

Sam Pepys and me

At the office all the morning, and at noon Mr. Coventry, who sat with us all the morning, and Sir G. Carteret, Sir W. Pen, and myself, by coach to Captain Marshe’s, at Limehouse, to a house that hath been their ancestors for this 250 years, close by the lime-house which gives the name to the place. Here they have a design to get the King to hire a dock for the herring busses, which is now the great design on foot, to lie up in. We had a very good and handsome dinner, and excellent wine. I not being neat in clothes, which I find a great fault in me, could not be so merry as otherwise, and at all times I am and can be, when I am in good habitt, which makes me remember my father Osborne’s rule for a gentleman to spare in all things rather than in that. So by coach home, and so to write letters by post, and so to bed.

within myself
the ancestors

a name to sign
which is a lie

I could be other-
wise at times

I can be reborn
to all things


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Saturday 19 October 1661.

Rhetoric

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
~ Doctrina Christiana en lengua española y tagala, 
1593, Manila



What is it to trust something or
someone? We learned about empirical
evidence, about proof provided through logic
and materials, and the ways they've been
documented to behave in experience. Any
departure from what we've come to call
the norm makes us uncomfortable, even
suspicious—For doesn't the sun rise
in the east and set in the west? And yet
there are waterfalls which appear to cascade
upwards, and hills where vehicles in neutral
ascend rather than descend. For centuries,
catechism meant suffer your fate in this vale
of tears; collect reward in the afterlife.