Dance

Sam Pepys and me

All the morning at the office with Sir W. Pen. Dined at home, and Luellin and Blurton with me. After dinner to the office again, where Sir G. Carteret and we staid awhile, and then Sir W. Pen and I on board some of the ships now fitting for East Indys and Portugall, to see in what forwardness they are, and so back home again, and I write to my father by the post about Brampton Court, which is now coming on. But that which troubles me is that my Father has now got an ague that I fear may endanger his life. So to bed.

the blur of her hips
fit for forwardness

and back
which is which

that snow that I fear
is life


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 18 March 1661/62.

Freedom from Want

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
~ after Carlos Bulosan and Norman Rockwell



Dust and heat, dirt roads. Fields where

every farmworker you'd see was bent to the soil:

iceberg lettuce, garlic, beans, all picked by hand. In

Delano, grape workers led strikes at ten vineyards. For

each box packed, they demanded twenty-five cents more.

Immigrant wages in the '20s— lower than other workers.

Divide and conquer, scapegoating, name-calling, beatings.

Eggplant and curly kale, arugula and strawberries;

in every smoothie and on the flesh of apples, in-

dentations of that past. Easter tables bedecked with tinted

eggs, spring peas, asparagus, and ham; and at Thanksgiving,

impeccable tablecloths for a showcase of plenty.

Deliver us from a world which makes invisible the human cost of labor,

endorses the privilege of some by taking away the rights of others.

Poetry Blog Digest 2025, Week 11

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: sound and silence, the worm moon, war news, the lost forest of time, and much more. Enjoy.

Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2025, Week 11”

White supremacy

Sam Pepys and me

All the morning at the office by myself about setting things in order there, and so at noon to the Exchange to see and be seen, and so home to dinner and then to the office again till night, and then home and after supper and reading a while to bed.
Last night the Blackmore pink brought the three prisoners, Barkestead, Okey, and Corbet, to the Tower, being taken at Delfe in Holland; where, the Captain tells me, the Dutch were a good while before they could be persuaded to let them go, they being taken prisoners in their land. But Sir G. Downing would not be answered so: though all the world takes notice of him for a most ungrateful villain for his pains.

in myself
no change of night

the black land
taken prisoner

and all the world
takes pains


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 17 March 1661/62.

Still in the Labyrinth

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Labyrinthitis is caused by the inflammation 
of the labyrinth, a maze of fluid-filled
channels in the inner ear.



I threw up into a plastic bag
all the way down the mountain
road, six hours from the city.
When I was done, my insides

felt completely wrung. Not only
was I lightheaded— also, I thought
the light glancing off the car's
side window was a sword or

the finger of God. Now I know
that the tingling in my palms was
probably from dehydration, and not
some fearful prelude to a rapturing.

Imagine the body rattling in the air,
in the throes of its disintegration—
though we're told the soul can neither
be created nor destroyed.

Nightfall

Sam Pepys and me

(Lord’s day). This morning, till churches were done, I spent going from one church to another and hearing a bit here and a bit there. So to the Wardrobe to dinner with the young Ladies, and then into my Lady’s chamber and talked with her a good while, and so walked to White Hall, an hour or two in the Park, which is now very pleasant. Here the King and Duke came to see their fowl play. The Duke took very civil notice of me. So walked home, calling at Tom’s, giving him my resolution about my boy’s livery. Here I spent an hour walking in the garden with Sir W. Pen, and then my wife and I thither to supper, where his son William is at home not well. But all things, I fear, do not go well with them; they look discontentedly, but I know not what ails them. Drinking of cold small beer here I fell ill, and was forced to go out and vomit, and so was well again and went home by and by to bed. Fearing that Sarah would continue ill, wife and I removed this night to our matted chamber and lay there.

I hear here and there
an owl calling

out walking
with my cold small fear


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Sunday 16 March 1661/62.

Memory of a Tree

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
~ after Mercedes López

I've come to love the milky taste
of tea with no actual milk in it,

and the tang of salt in the air on dry days
in the mountains. What are the scaffolds

on which we build if not the ghosts
of magnificent cities, whose blueprints

sycophants and tyrants tried but failed
to obliterate? Here is a lattice studded

with diamond points of light, an oceanic
generation of forests. I want to see

not monuments but grids conducting
the hum of a different electricity, lanes

and highways overlaid with cool moisture;
every pewter cell of night cast open.

Student

Sam Pepys and me

With Sir G. Carteret and both the Sir Williams at Whitehall to wait on the Duke in his chamber, which we did about getting money for the Navy and other things. So back again to the office all the morning. Thence to the Exchange to hire a ship for the Maderas, but could get none. Then home to dinner, and Sir G. Carteret and I all the afternoon by ourselves upon business in the office till late at night. So to write letters and home to bed. Troubled at my maid’s being ill.

art to hang
ash for dinner

tea to write letters
home to trouble


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Saturday 15 March 1661/62.

Optimistic

Sam Pepys and me

At the office all the morning. At noon Sir W. Pen and I making a bargain with the workmen about his house, at which I did see things not so well contracted for as I would have, and I was vexed and made him so too to see me so critical in the agreement. Home to dinner. In the afternoon came the German Dr. Kuffler, to discourse with us about his engine to blow up ships. We doubted not the matter of fact, it being tried in Cromwell’s time, but the safety of carrying them in ships; but he do tell us, that when he comes to tell the King his secret (for none but the Kings, successively, and their heirs must know it), it will appear to be of no danger at all.
We concluded nothing; but shall discourse with the Duke of York to-morrow about it.
In the afternoon, after we had done with him, I went to speak with my uncle Wight and found my aunt to have been ill a good while of a miscarriage, I staid and talked with her a good while.
Thence home, where I found that Sarah the maid had been very ill all day, and my wife fears that she will have an ague, which I am much troubled for.
Thence to my lute, upon which I have not played a week or two, and trying over the two songs of “Nulla, nulla,” &c., and “Gaze not on Swans,” which Mr. Berkenshaw set for me a little while ago, I find them most incomparable songs as he has set them, of which I am not a little proud, because I am sure none in the world has them but myself, not so much as he himself that set them. So to bed.

the pen and I
making things up

we doubt the time
that comes in secret

for a miscarriage
or the song of a swan


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Friday 14 March 1661/62.

Elegy for the Human, with Extradition Standoff

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Human: mid-15c., humain, humaigne, "human," from  
Old French humain, umain (adj.) "of or belonging
to man" (12c.), from Latin humanus "of man, human,"
also "humane, philanthropic, kind, gentle, polite;
... in part from PIE *(dh)ghomon-, literally
"earthling, earthly being," as opposed to
the gods (from root *dhghem- "earth")
- etymonline.com



Given a choice to do the right
thing, what is it that people do?
At Villamor air base before the former

president is flown to face the music
at the international criminal court, his wife
and daughter scream "Humane, humane,"

stalling for time. He's an octogenarian
now; his health is poor, he's waiting for
his children, because because because—

Police close ranks and bodies form a shield
but not a weapon clicks in place. His rights
are read to him, unlike the thousands

he ordered shot because "Human rights,
son of a bitch." A milky fog, a kind of gauze
bandage, drapes over this ordinary day. A dog

limps down the alley. A partly disemboweled
squirrel's plastered on the road, syrupy
rot beneath the traffic stop.