Saturday, December 17, 2016

ESSENTIAL ~












the bluebird




there's a bluebird in my heart that

wants to get out

but I'm too tough for him,

I say, stay in there, I'm not going

to let anybody see

you.



there's a bluebird in my heart that

wants to get out

but I pour whiskey on him and inhale

cigarette smoke

and the whores and the bartenders

and the grocery clerks

never know that

he's

in there.



there's a bluebird in my heart that

wants to get out

but I'm too tough for him,

I say,

stay down, do you want to mess

me up?

you want to screw up the

works?

you want to blow my book sales in

Europe?



there's a bluebird in my heart that

wants to get out

but I'm too clever, I only let him out

at night sometimes

when everybody's asleep.

I say, I know that you're there,

so don't be

sad.



then I put him back,

but he's singing a little

in there, I haven't quite let him

die

and we sleep together like

that

with our

secret pact

and it's nice enough to

make a man

weep, but I don't

weep, do

you?





——————————————————————————————————

C H A R L E S      B U K O W S K I
E S S E N T I A L      B U K O W S K I
Selected and edited by Abel Debritto
Ecco /Harper Collins UK 2016













Friday, December 16, 2016

JOSEPH A. ENZWEILER ~












The Doorway


There is the moment of the day

in early June, when yellow light

falls on the equisetum and the ground

breaks out so luminous, so green,

could winter ever fall atop

such beauty and lie so foreign,

so deep? I watch from my doorway

how the light moves off,grows pale

finally, the way a face falls

out of memory. Behind me,

through the door are all the things

I have, part of the world grown

used to me. And beyond at the twilight

woods, what will gather me

tomorrow. But now I let go

in the gentle, given night, unearned,

and settle in the door

(while the unmoving part of me

still turns to you to speak love

always). But soon we must be still.

For a rain begins to fall, so fine

that the woods fill up

with silver light

but make no sound.



——————————

Joseph A. Enzweiler






Wednesday, December 14, 2016

BHARTRIHARI ~ Translated by Andrew Schelling







Once I Was Bit By A Snake
translated by Andrew Schelling


Order now through PAYPAL ~


Issued from Longhouse, 2016

or check to ~  Longhouse, PO Box 2454, West Brattleboro, VT 05303
or contact us by email for information

$15 signed

$2 shipping


____________________


As we posted this announcement for Andrew, we noted the passing of his father
Thomas C. Schelling

The New York Times

our condolences





THE NEW YORK TIMES WAKE-UP CALL ~



BORROWED FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES 
BECAUSE IT MAKES DAMN GOOD SENSE:





On Monday, members of the Electoral College will vote in Donald J. Trump as president. Though he lost the election by nearly three million votes and almost daily generates headlines about new scandals, the Democratic Party is doing little to stop him. If you’ve been asking yourself “Where are the Democrats?” you’re not alone.
Since the election, top Democrats have been almost absent on the national stage. Rather, they have been involved largely in internecine warfare about how much to work with Mr. Trump. The Hillary Clinton campaign, trying to encourage a peaceful transition, has gone almost completely dark, with her most notable appearances coming in selfies with strangers. Nobody deserves downtime more than Mrs. Clinton, but while she is decompressing, the country is moving toward its biggest electoral mistake in history.
We have recently learned that President-elect Trump has ethical and business conflicts that seem to violate the Constitution; is skipping his national security briefings while dangerously departing from longstanding bipartisan foreign policy; has criticized union workers and protesters on his Twitter feed; and plans to staff much of his cabinet and high-level leadership with billionaires dedicated to eradicating the very programs they are tasked with overseeing. In the meantime, the most recent reports from the C.I.A. are that Russia interfered with the election.

Photo

John Podesta, on election night, telling Hillary Clinton supporters to go home.CreditChang W. Lee/The New York Times 

There’s no shortage of legal theories that could challenge Mr. Trump’s anointment, but they come from outsiders rather than the Democratic Party. Impassioned citizens have been pleading with electors to vote against Mr. Trump; law professors have argued that winner-take-all laws for electoral votes are unconstitutional; a small group, the Hamilton Electors, is attempting to free electors to vote their consciences; and a new theory has arisen that there is legal precedent for courts to give the election to Mrs. Clinton based on Russian interference. All of these efforts, along with the grass-roots protests, boycotts and petitions, have been happening without the Democratic Party. The most we’ve seen is a response to the C.I.A. revelations, but only with Republicans onboard to give Democrats bipartisan cover.
Take the recount efforts in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. While the Democratic Party relitigates grudges in the press, Jill Stein, the Green Party candidate who received about 64 million fewer votes than Mrs. Clinton, has led the effort. The Democrats have grudgingly participated from the sidelines, but only because public perception forced them to. This effort has proved feeble, with a Pennsylvania judge denying the request because it was “later than last minute.”
Contrast the Democrats’ do-nothingness to what we know the Republicans would have done. If Mr. Trump had lost the Electoral College while winning the popular vote, an army of Republican lawyers would have descended on the courts and local election officials. The best of the Republican establishment would have been filing lawsuits and infusing every public statement with a clear pronouncement that Donald Trump was the real winner. And they would have started on the morning of Nov. 9, using the rhetoric of patriotism and courage.
How can we be so certain? This is what happened in 2000. When Florida was still undecided after election night, the Republicans didn’t leave their fate in the hands of individuals or third-party candidates. No, they recruited former Secretary of State James A. Baker III to direct efforts on behalf of George W. Bush. They framed their project as protecting Mr. Bush’s victory rather than counting votes. They were clear, consistent and forceful, with the biggest names in Republican politics working the process.
Moreover, they didn’t cop to the possibility that their theories might lose or look foolish in retrospect. Take the theory that ultimately succeeded in the Supreme Court. There was no precedent for the idea that the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause required a uniform recount within a state. However, the Republicans pressed that theory and convinced a majority, even though the justices acknowledged that the argument was both unprecedented and not to be used again. It was a win for pure audacity.

Fast forward to 2016, and the Democrats are doing nothing of the sort. Instead, they are leaving the fight to academics and local organizers who seem more horrified by a Trump presidency than Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and the Democratic Party. The Republicans in 2000 threw everything they could muster against the wall to see if it stuck, with no concern about potential blowback; the Democrats in 2016 are apparently too worried about being called sore losers. Instead of weathering the criticism that comes with fighting an uphill, yet historically important battle, the party is still trying to magic up a plan.
As Monday’s Electoral College vote approaches, Democrats should be fighting tooth and nail. Instead, we are once again left with incontrovertible proof that win or lose, Republicans behave as if they won while Democrats behave as if they lost. What this portends for the next four years is truly terrifying.

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

STEVE LEWANDOWSKI ~










N E I G H B O R



I like the man

who hays his front yard




________________

Stephen Lewandowski
Last Settler in the Finger Lakes
FootHills Publishing, 2015










THE WOLVERINE WAY ~



















Monday, December 12, 2016

DARLING COMPANION ~








 Hereditary



I kid him

& he argues

with me which

turns me to

argue with

him as he

begins to

kid me








She Comes To Me This Way



In her stocking feet and the

Pleats of her skirt, the way

The blouse is plain and opened

At the sand of her throat and her

Face is burned with winter and

So happy, that it is only then I

Notice something more — a

Necklace of rawhide and soapstone

Pebble, and even closer, the etch of

Turquoise on the piece, which brings

Me to her eyes…









More Father & Son Quality Time



He found in the farmyard

   3 clean white pilgrim goose

Feathers freshly dropped



He picked up a stick

Made a blunt arrow

Strung a bow



He taped the feathers to the arrow

Filled the bow

Aimed it at me







Off To School




except for

his base-

ball hat I

could kiss

him easily









Darling Companion




We’ve come to the end of the highway

Breathless on the Panamint Range



You in a dress all blue buttoned

Down to the knees and a



Breeze parting your sweater —

I have a photograph where



You stand in sage against

A Route 395 road sign



Pointing us either north

Or south along a high



Spring snow Sierra sky and

No possible ending to the day




_______________________________


Bob Arnold
ONCE IN VERMONT
GNOMON




photo by Bob Arnold