Tuesday, October 28, 2025

ESTHER LIN ~




The Ghost Wife


Who, after years

with her husband,

years of rearing

their strapping boy,

is scorched by an eye.

She was gathering laundry.

The sun stuttered

from the clouds.

The rice bubbled

on the stove. Her hands

and face bubbled

too. She did not

cry out. She did not

speak. She was hurried

indoors. What to do?

The neighbors. The talk.

The thing to do was

lay her in a coffin

upstairs

and close the lid.



______________________

Esther Lin

Cold Thief Place

Alice James Books, 2025



Monday, October 27, 2025

JACK DeJOHNETTE ( 1942 ~ 2025 ) ~

 


J A C K    D e J O H N E T T E


       Arden Wray for The New York Times



BERNADETTE MAYER ~

 




Essay


I guess it’s too late to live on the farm I guess it’s too late to move to a farm I guess it’s too late to start farming I guess it’s too late to begin farming I guess we’ll never have a farm I guess we’re too old to do farming I guess we couldn’t afford to buy a farm anyway I guess we’re not suited to being farmers I guess we’ll never have a farm now I guess farming is not in the cards now I guess Lewis wouldn’t make a good farmer I guess I can’t expect we’ll ever have a farm now I guess I’ll have to give up all my dreams of being a farmer I guess I’ll never be a farmer now We couldn’t get a farm anyway though Allen Ginsberg got one late in life Maybe someday I’ll have a big garden I guess farming is really out Feeding the pigs and the chickens, walking between miles of rows of crops I guess farming is just too difficult We’ll never have a farm Too much work and still to be poets Who are the farmer poets Was there ever a poet who had a self-sufficient farm Flannery O’Connor raised peacocks And Wendell Berry has a farm Faulkner may have farmed a little And Robert Frost had farmland And someone told me Samuel Beckett farmed Very few poets are real farmers If William Carlos Williams could be a doctor and Charlie Vermont too, Why not a poet who was also a farmer Of course there was Brook Farm And Virgil raised bees Perhaps some poets of the past were overseers of farmers I guess poets tend to live more momentarily Than life on a farm would allow You could never leave the farm to give a reading Or to go to a lecture by Emerson in Concord I don’t want to be a farmer but my mother was right I should never have tried to rise out of the proletariat Unless I can convince myself as Satan argues with Eve That we are among a proletariat of poets of all the classes Each ill-paid and surviving on nothing Or on as little as one needs to survive Steadfast as any farmer and fixed as the stars Tenants of a vision we rent out endlessly



____________________

Bernadette Mayer

The Golden Book of Words

New Directions 2025

originally published by Angel Hair Books, 1978




Saturday, October 25, 2025

MODEST MOUSE TONIGHT ~

 


    1996


GEORGE SEFERIS ~




Selva Oscura


When I close my eyes, I find myself in an expansive darkness

the color of dawn; I sense it on your fingertips.

Forget the lie that helped you live.

Bare your feet, bare your eyes —

very few things remain when we've bared ourselves

but in the end we can see them exactly as they are.

When I close my eyes I always find myself on a path,

the yards ruined to the right and left and in the corner

the house with windowpanes beaten by the sun, empty

I thought of your fingertips beating against the panes.

I thought of your heart beating behind the panes

and the very few things that set a man apart from others

are never overcome.

You don't know anything because you looked at the sun.

Your blood dripped into the black leaves of the laurel bush.

I see the nightingale and the marbled moon of evenings past,

when I dragged your blood into the river, dyeing it red.

I ponder — when I ponder — I ponder

my veins and the mystery of your hands,

guiding carefully, descending step by step.

When I close my eyes, I find myself in an expansive garden.


                                                                                  May 1937



____________________________

George Seferis

Book of Exercises II

World Poetry 2024

Translated from the Greek by Jennifer R. Kellogg



Friday, October 24, 2025

MARIO DELL' ARCO ~



 Spiral Staircase


    In search of a bawdy shade

of blue, without the slightest wisp of cloud,

stair by stair ascend.

I've stumbled, by spiral's end,

out of this world and into heaven.




The Apple


    One last apple among the leaves

of the highest branch, the sweetest.

The pickers must've missed it.

No matter — only I

can reach that high.




Watermelon


    A man carves watermelons

beneath the green shade

of the vendor's stand.

Dozens of half-moons

    make moonlight red.




Star Hunter


    Forget about thrushes, quails,

woodcocks! I'm out hunting

stars with a butterfly net.

Undecided between Orion,

Vega, and Scorpio, I bet

on the Herdsman, Bootes.

    At dawn I return empty-handed,

net burnt to a crisp.




I Built A Wall


    It's my fault.  Stone by stone

by stone I built a wall,

walled myself off from the world.

    No way out now.

Even if I wanted to

feel your hand, one

step and I'd crack

my head on that wall.




Sunflower


    Bright yellow in a field of green,

face to face with the sky,

holding its breath, calls it a day.

    Not even the sun, for all its art,

can purge night from the sunflower's heart.



___________________________

Mario dell' Arco

Day Lasts Forever

World Poetry, 2024

translated from Romanesco by Marc Di Martino



Thursday, October 23, 2025

REMEMBERING DAVID HUDDLE (1942 ~ 2025) ~

 



A   T A L K 




URSULA K. LeGUIN TONIGHT ~

 




NASSER RABAH ~

 




Rage


It wasn't you they saw on the television screen, it wasn't you

as they filmed you coming out crumbled from the rubble,

who then was applauding and clamoring for death?

This is what war makes you: it takes your skin off and gives

you a tent, and like a crumpled piece of paper, it throws

your home out with the trash—it plucks your pink heart

and plants gunpowder stones, no wheat fields gleam in

your eyes from now on, no hills of olive groves dream

to be picked, no bunch of kids play on your shoulders,

no grass of remembrance sits with you in the sunset

of the house, nothing here or there except limitless

rage, boiling over to the end of time and distance,

it was not you; it was not a stream of water, it was

a wolf snarling underneath the rubble, wanting

to rip the flesh of these tanks with its teeth.


March 13, 2024



________________________________


Nasser Rabah

Gaza: The Poem Said Its Piece

Translated from the Arabic by

Ammiel Alcalay, Emna Zghal, Khaled Al-Hilli

City Lights Books, 2025




Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Saturday, October 18, 2025

HAWK & PREZ TONIGHT ~



 


NEW! CHARLES GOODRICH ~

 





Charles Goodrich

Building Knot House: A Scrapbook

Longhouse, 2025


$12 postpaid,

payable by Paypal or check

please use our email of longhousepoetry@gmail.com



LONGHOUSE

P.O. Box 2454

West Brattleboro

Vermont

05303





Friday, October 17, 2025

SHE'S A BADASS ~

 


R E A D   M E


Backbeat Books

2023



LILIANA PONCE ~

 




I will wait in the real sand, 

the tangible form of rock,

in the conversion of fate by breath.


With words I feed the creation of time

— someone else can speak, someone else can write.

Liquid movements cycled by the marrow

of a false body.

The glass absorbs the sky.


I will wait in the sane, in the dust of the rock

—in the shadow of dryness I erase them.

Soothe me with passive thoughts.

Soothe me because I don't exist.



________________________

Liliana Ponce

Theory of the Voice and Dream

translated from the Spanish by Michael Martin Shea

World Poetry 2025


Wednesday, October 15, 2025

FRANK O'HARA ~

 




Homosexuality


So we are taking off our masks, are we, and keeping

our mouths shut? as if we'd been pierced by a glance!


The song of an old cow is not more full of judgment

than the vapors which escape one's soul when one is sick;


so I pull the shadows around me like a puff

and crinkle my eyes as if at the most exquisite moment


of a very long opera, and then we are off!

without reproach and without hope that our delicate feet


will touch the earth again, let alone "very soon"

It is the law of my own voice I shall investigate.


I start like ice, my finger to my ear, my ear

to my heart, that proud cur at the garbage can


in the rain. It's wonderful to admire oneself

with complete candor, tallying up the merits of each


of the latrines. 14th Street is drunken and credulous,

53rd tries to tremble but is too at rest. The good


love a park and the inept a railway station,

and there are the divine ones who drag themselves up


and down the lengthening shadow of an Abyssinian head

in the dust, trailing their long elegant heels of hot air


crying to confuse the brave "It's a summer day,

and I want to be wanted more than anything else in the world."


1954, First published, Poetry, Chicago 1970

_____________________

Frank O' Hara

from Super Gay Poems

edited by Stephanie Burt

Belknap Press of Harvard University

2025


Tuesday, October 14, 2025

GURNEY NORMAN ~

 


G U R N E Y   N O R M A N

July 22, 1937 – October 12, 2025


“When he writes, the page just falls away.”

WENDELL BERRY


ERIN MOURE ~

 




Evocation


As beautiful as the idea of a shoulder,

the skin of a cup that mirrors the spine,

the spartan stone confesses

stubbornly in the dead limb.

It was not milled oats, it breathed.

It rubbed and pleaded with the sea's tears

it was serrated and sandy

glad levity inviting the barbarian stranger.


It was beautiful as the shoulder of cattle,

between the grass and flies,

between the light of August as dreamed in April

and, and, it was only the palm of her hand.



__________________________

Erin Moure

from Super Gay Poems

edited by Stephanie Burt

Harvard University (Belknap Press)

2025


Monday, October 13, 2025

NAT KING COLE TONIGHT ~

 



CINEMA 2 ~

 



Mehdi Hasan sits down with Palestinian filmmaker Annemarie Jacir and Palestinian actress Hiam Abbas to discuss their latest film ‘Palestine 36,’ which explores the ‘Great Revolt’ against British rule in Palestine from 1936-39, before the Nakba in 1948. The film is Palestine’s official submission to the Oscars for 2026 and received one of the longest ovations from an audience at the Toronto International Film Festival. They also discuss censorship in Hollywood and what it was like filming in the middle of an ongoing genocide.


CINEMA ~

 



T O B Y   T A L B O T



JOAN DIDION'S NOTES ~

 




R E A D   M E


     Knopf 2025