Friday, September 22, 2017

PETER COLE ~








The Prayer Book




For years I've wanted to write a prayer book.

Why? Because I've learned

that the solid hangs upon nothingness.

Because I've found that the sentence is a kind of petition.

And because I've found that in all that I've said

in all that I've said I've said only thank you.

So, little by little,

                       in fact I've written that book

and today it weighs some two hundred pounds

and soon it will celebrate its fiftieth birthday

and yesterday I bought it shoes.


Aharon Shabtai (translated by Peter Cole)







Kharja / Closure






 "Oh, I'll

love you alright;

         so

   long as you

manage to bend



   both of my

anklets

back to the

   thin silver

earrings you gave me."


(Anonymous, Mozarabic, 12th century
 translate by Peter Cole)








Palestine: A Sestina


Hackles are raised at the mere mention of Palestine,
let alone  The Question of — who owns the pain?
Often it seems the real victims here are the hills —
those pulsing ridges, whose folds are tender fuzz of green
kill with softness. On earth, it's true, we're only guests,
but people live in places, and stake out claims to land.

From Moab Moses saw, long ago — a land
far off, and once I stood there facing Palestine
with Hassan, whose family lives in Amman. (We were his guests
at the Wahdat refugee camp.) Wonder shot with pain
came into his eyes as he gazed across the green
valley between Nebo and Lydda beyond the hills.

Help would come, says the Psalmist, from one of those hills,
though scholars still don't know for certain whether the land
in question was Zion, or the high places of Baal. The green
olives ripened, and ripen, either way in Palestine,
and the memory of groves cut down rings on pain
for those whose people worked them, for themselves or guests.

"I have been made a stranger in my home by guests,"
says Job, in Hebrew that evolved along these hills,
though he himself was foreign to them. His famous pain
is also that of those who call the Promised Land
home in  another tongue. Could what was pledged be Palestine?
Is Scripture's fence intended to guard this mountain's green?

Many have roamed its slopes and fields, dressed in green
fatigues, unable to fathom what they mean, as guests.
And armies patrol still, throughout Palestine,
as ministers mandate women and men to carve up its hills
to keep them from ever again becoming enemy land.
The search, meanwhile, goes on—for a balm to end the pain,

though it seems only to widen the rippling circles of pain,
as though the land itself became the ripples, and its green
a kind of sigh. So spring comes round again to the land,
as echoes cry: "It's mine!" —and the planes will bring in guests,
so long as water and longing run through these hills,
which some (and coins) call Israel, and others Palestine.

The pundits' talk of Palestine doesn't account for the pain—
or the bone-white hills, breaking the heart as they go green
before the souls of guests-on-earth who've known this land.



————————————
Peter Cole
Hymns & Qualms
new & selected poems & translations
Farrar, 2017












Thursday, September 21, 2017

LARRY EIGNER ~











The University of Alabama Press 
2017

———————————————



Wednesday, September 20, 2017

NICOLAS GUILLEN ~






Nicolas Guillén, Cuban Poet

 (1902-1989)






Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Monday, September 18, 2017

. . .WHO IS IN LOVE WITH ME ~










Wood For Water





How come this night
You wash in a pan
A shallow draw of stream water
Spilled down from wild apples
Of the mountain, where deer
Browse, make trail
Leave droppings

Hand over hand, you may
Think of it this way, or
Water that simply flows
Spreading into a sound of peepers
Where I’ve entered
Truck low geared
Flushing every redwing
From trees we were to clear

Blackberries grew then
Tickling stone walls
While working in the heat, high boots
Rolled pants
Many came apart wet in my hands —
Couldn’t save any, not even for you

That was a half year ago —
Now dead wood dropped, hauled, split
Chickadees perch closely, fluttering pine
There is firewood to stack dry
Someplace through winter

At night you bathe cold, cold water
Heated warm —
When you dress you forget underwear
And the thin white blouse —

Just a dress, sleeveless and red






Rope Of Bells






It is the

Rope of bells

You have put behind the door

That let me know

Whenever one of us goes

To the privy

The woodshed

The outdoors

Lovely






Passing






It is Spring

Already you relax in a cotton skirt

Passing through mountains is a strong feeling

Fields plowed, new wood split, the hawk floating

Puffs of softwood in the gray hills

A river runs with snow melting

A small bridge neatly built to get by

There is a pleasure in such places

An old woman and her huge straw hat

Raking the far corner of a hay field






These Of The Morning





There is the wondrous that begins here

So easily, the pail that you put out in the rain

That fills



Walk a meadow

Hold a hand with your two hands

Be with your closest

Sunlight is never far away



We’ve crossed the small water into our surroundings

Hiked and became tired and loved

And what we didn’t bring with us

We found

In the smell of each other, the little movings




————————————

BOB ARNOLD
I'm In Love With You
Who Is In Love With Me
Longhouse 2012





Sunday, September 17, 2017

Friday, September 15, 2017

TRUE GRIT ~




H A R R Y     D E AN    S T A N T O N

July 14, 1926 - September  15, 2017 














opening words spoken by hunter s. thompson (from samuel johnson)
 then harry dean stanton's
gears and oils voice takes over as
 astonishingly
 the only one of reason 






THE TROOPER (2,300 MILES) ~





YELLOW  WARBLER









CY TWOMBLY ~






Princeton 2016









Wednesday, September 13, 2017

MILLRAT ~








driving while under the influence



it was three AM and I hit

the blinking yellow light

on the route three rotary near Drum Hill

we got out quick

to throw away beer cans

and then I backed up the car a bit

and tried to go forward

but the car wouldn't go forward

so I backed up around the rotary

into a gas station

I figured I could put my car

in the row of cars already there

and nobody would notice     right?

I get out and hide behind but

by this time I can see the flashing lights

and it was really something

the police cruiser goes around the rotary

take the exit I took

and comes right to me

I was alone      all my friends split

and they get me      for leaving the scene

driving under the influence

and being a minor in possession

all kinds of stuff      right?

I asked the guy found me

how'd you catch me?

he said he followed the leaking radiator

it leaked after the crash      right?

fifty million dumb cops in the world

and this guy

has to be a genius



———————————————
Michael Casey
MILLRAT
Adastra Press 1999


*by the way, "I asked the guy found me"
is how the line reads in the book










Tuesday, September 12, 2017

W. EUGENE SMITH ~





Farrar 2017

~

I want to believe if the photographer
W Eugene Smith wanted to read
a biography of himself,
this might be the one.
A gem.











Monday, September 11, 2017

I'M IN LOVE WITH YOU. . . ~




Susan,  Bob,   Jack,  VW beetle,  wheelbarrow,  home  (1980)

~

I'm In Love With You Who Is In Love With Me
for Susan & Carson





October ~ for Susan




It is a small bowl
You wash from
This early morning

Your hands just right
For its depth





Long Ago





That tiny toy instrument

Shaped like a French horn

Displayed with a dozen others 

We both gave it a squeeze —

But for some reason this

One sounded the best

With its familiar sound

More than a horn

And it took your breath away

And close to tears

At how its cry

Was like our geese

On a little farm

From long ago






Work Song






We carried the saw and ax to the top of the hill

Hop hornbeam logs waiting dry off the ground

I cut the logs into firewood size and split each one



You do the ground work, keep everything in order

We stack the splits into heavy canvas sacks

Carry it all down a trail under trees of meadowy leaves



I’m in love with you who is in love with me

The woodshed at home is filled to the brim

I’m in love with you who is in love with me






Finding Open Water






There are these things

That make lovely creatures

More lovely —

A red-tailed hawk sweeps

From one moment of the hillside

To another

Rising mist will not lose him



3 deer wade into the shoulder of a field

They feel safe in the holler of rain



Then you, rolling up your pants

Before a bicycle ride

Your hair just touching the ground

I tell you I will do something with that

Your smile makes the beginning of all this







What I Hear





This river water is

The warm breath of

Her whisper, what I hear —

The brown and white flurry

Of her thin clothing

The sweat of handwork

That musses the long

Blonde hair — dirt across

The forehead, may I wash

It off? thicken my hands

In that hair, kiss what I love

Away from our work and bathing

Part whisper and part water





————————————

BOB ARNOLD
I'm In Love With You
Who Is In Love With Me
Longhouse 2012







Sunday, September 10, 2017

JONATHAN WILLIAMS ~









After one has read ALL the books by Jonathan Williams
this is the book where you will want to land. . .
or vice versa. . .
whichever way you go
don't miss out!










Saturday, September 9, 2017

JOHN ASHBERY ~




( Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2017 )


This biography only makes this reader request
that there will be subsequent volumes —
perhaps three 
to peel all the good apple.

Highly recommend.

(I'm reading in early June before any
rush of first reviews)











Friday, September 8, 2017

REVOLUTION IN THE AIR ~







CHICAGO   REVIEW   PRESS   2009




I was carrying this book around all Spring
in a book sack when we were off traveling somewhere —
rumpled up cloth copy sitting with me by a river, in the woods,
on a lawn, by a brook, in the passenger seat reading —
some hate the book, think the long-Dylan savant 
is pompous — ah, so what: it's a romp going through
these 300 songs, historically and the astonishing
line of subjects. "Blowin' in the Wind"
was not Dylan's first song — that was saved
for Brigitte Bardot
"Song to Brigit"
(1956)
Dylan was 15 years old.