Wednesday, February 6, 2019

GEORGES BATAILLE ~









I lose you in the wind

I count you among the dead

a necessary rope

between wind and heart









I have nothing to do with this world

if not to burn

I love you in dying



Your absence of repose

a mad wind whistles in your head

you are sick to have laughed

you fled me for a better void

that tore your heart



Tear me up if you want to

my eyes find you in the night

burning with fever









I'm cold at heart I tremble

from the depths of suffering I call you

with an inhuman cry

as if I gave birth



You strangle me like death

I know this miserably

I find you only in agony

you are beautiful like death



All words strangle me









Star pieces the sky

cry like death

strangle



I don't want life

strangling me is a kindness

the star that rises

is cold like a dead woman









Excite me, eyes

I love the night

my heart is black



Push me into the night

everything is false

I suffer



The world feels death

birds fly eyes slashed open

you are somber as a black sky









The festival will begin

in filth and fear



The stars will fall

when death approaches.









You are the horror of the night

I love you like a death rattle

you are weak like death



I love you like delirium

you know that my head dies

you are the immensity the fear



You are beautiful like slaughter

enormous heart I suffocate

your stomach is naked as the night.









You bring me straight to the end

the agony has begun

I have nothing more to tell you

I speak from the grave

and the dead are silent.








Limpid from head to toe

fragile as the dawn

the wind has shattered the heart



For the duration of anguish

the black night is a church

wherein one slaughters a pig



Trembling from head to toe

fragile as death

agony my great sister



You are colder than the earth.





____________________

Georges Bataille (1897 - 1962 )
The Poetry of Georges Bataille
translated and introduction by Stuart Kendall
SUNY Press / NY 2018









Tuesday, February 5, 2019

IZZY YOUNG ~








1928 ~ 2019




KAFKA'S LAST TRIAL ~






Cynthia Ozick's sharp-eyed view of the book
must be shared ~

“Though Benjamin Balint’s masterful hunt for Kafka’s rightful ownership begins as a local dispute in an Israeli family court, it soon thickens into modernity’s most bitterly contentious cultural conundrum. Who should inherit Franz Kafka? The woman into whose hands his manuscripts fortuitously fell? Germany, the nation that murdered his sisters but claims his spirit? Israel, asserting a sovereign yet intimate ancestral right? Searing questions of language, of personal bequest, of friendship, of biographical evidence, of national pride, of justice, of deceit and betrayal, even of metaphysical allegiance, burn through Balint’s scrupulous trackings of Kafka’s final standing before the law.” — Cynthia Ozick, author of Foreign Bodies



Norton 
2018


"The rise of Nazism put an end to the rich German-Jewish literary
symbiosis that had so decisively shaped both cultures, and to the long and lively Jewish love affair with the German language."

 — Benjamin Balint
the opening sentence to chapter 9
"Kafka's Creator"







Monday, February 4, 2019

HEAVEN LAKE (19) ~








You Wouldn’t Believe How
We Have Never Been Apart






In the living room

she sleeps a very good sleep

the sleep of winter like the

forest brook we know now

rolling over into spring and she

rolls too toward me in her sleep

so at the moment she

awakens, looks a bit spring

startled, slowly standing

and now opening her eyes

there she is again

with me

who never went anywhere

who never would go anywhere

I am waiting while she sleeps

see the many blues of her necklace

the freedom of her bare legs

the spill of her sandy hair

for a moment she doesn’t seem to know me

it will be lovely to meet again








Always






Where one

Iris grows

Alone



It would

Look better

As two







Pegleg







we saw the fox at a distance

hopping on three legs and

later went to find his snow

tracks crossing the pond



sure enough — three paws down

one paw up



this morning we found his

tracks closer, climbing the

stairs to a porch and stopping to

look into our bedroom door







Only Child





He is four years old.

Ask him — he will say

He is four years old but

Almost five years old.

It is winter time. Sweetheart

Has gone to town for errands

And I am home for the entire

Afternoon. The snow is deep

Enough to sled, we sled. In

The front yard, in the back

Yard, down the driveway hill

Someone drove their truck up

To visit and we use the tire

Tracks to begin our slide.

After awhile we sled across

The dirt road looking madly

Both ways, stopping above the river.

Its current gushing over ice.

When he was three years old

We all went down there to

Catch “lobsters.” Don’t worry.



Now he is four years old and

Buttons his own shirt in the

Morning, wears clothes like

Me. His hair is long, thick

And blond, perfect to mess

With my hands. After we sled 

He shovels snow into the sled

Says it’s rocks and this is a

Dump truck. Cheeks berry ripe.

He explains everything to me.

He is in the backwoods with

No friends. He deals with Jack

The dog, geese, chickens and

Cats like people. Don’t worry.

He wants to know where the

Boot tracks go that disappear

Into the woods. I don’t know.

He reminds me they’re mine.

When we go inside we strip out

Of warm clothes and together

Drink hot chocolate at the kitchen table.

He wants the spoon.

When done he follows me into the

Other room where I sit in a chair

And he climbs onto my lap.

He looks briefly into my eyes,

It’s been a wonderful afternoon.

He burps, laughs in my face.






—————————————


Bob Arnold
Heaven Lake

Longhouse 2018










Sunday, February 3, 2019

ROBERT DESNOS ~






Letter to Youki


My love,

Our suffering would be unbearable if we couldn't think of it as a passing and sentimental illness. Our rediscoveries will adorn our life for at least thirty years. As for me, I'm taking a deep drink of youth and I'll come back to you full of love and strength! During our separation a birthday, mine, was the occasion of a long fantasy about you. Will my letter reach you in time for your birthday? I would've liked to give you 100,000 American cigarettes, a dozen dresses from the great couturiers, an apartment on the Seine, a car, the cottage in the Compiegne forest, the one on Belle-Isle and a little four-sous bouquet. While I'm gone, keep flowers around all the time; I'll pay you back for them. All the rest, I promise it to you later.

But above all else, drink a bottle of good wine and think of me. I hope our friends won't forget to visit you that day. I thank them for their courage and devotion. About a week ago I got a package from J-L Barrault. Kiss him for me, and Madeleine Renaud too; the package is proof my letter got through. I haven't gotten an answer; I'm waiting for one every day. Kiss everyone in the family, Lucien, Aunt Juliet, Georges. If you run into Passeur's brother, give him my best and ask him if he knows anybody who can help you if you need it. What's happening with my books at the printer's? I've got a lot of ideas for poems and novels. I regret not having the freedom or the time to write them. But you can tell Gallimard that within three months after I get back he'll have the manuscript of a love story in an entirely new genre. I'm ending this letter for today.

Today, July 15th, I got four letters from Barrault, Julia, Dr. Benet and Daniel. Thank them apologize for me for not answering. I'm allowed only one letter a month. Still no word from you, but they send me news of you; that will be for the next time. I hope that letter is our life to come.

                                                                                     Robert

                                                                             Buchenwald


—————————
Robert Desnos
The Voice of Robert Desnos
(Selected Poems)
translated by William Kulik
The Sheep Meadow Press
2004








Saturday, February 2, 2019

RAN BLAKE ~












BILL BATHURST ~ NEW FROM LONGHOUSE 2019 ~








~ Bill's long poem to Billie Holiday ~
written in 1967
published for the first time


Bill Bathurst
 Time On My Hands 

Longhouse, 2019

First edition

New and limited

A Longhouse limited edition 
two page foldout 
with decorative label 

Signed by the poet


Buy now ~
$15 
free shipping
with Paypal  
please use our email

poetry@sover.net


Check or money order ~
Longhouse
PO Box 2454
West Brattleboro, Vermont 
05303







Thursday, January 31, 2019

ON THOMAS MERTON ~






Thomas Merton, looking younger each year,
in an undated photography in Kentucky
in front of his hermitage








A mainly Buddhist publisher took a chance on this
Catholic writer and her Catholic subject ~
you can as well.

A lovely addition to the Merton library.





Shambhala
Boulder
2018











Wednesday, January 30, 2019

TERRANCE HAYES / ETHERIDGE KNIGHT ~








I’m reading one more interesting book on an open field theory of poetry and its place, this time by Terrance Hayes and all about Etheridge Knight, a poet I followed closely for almost 50 years, in some ways reminding me of another I love Chester Himes, both ex-prisoners, a great deal of their work being done through the inmate and prison perspective. In other words, always a prisoner once out. Himes took off for Europe (like Baldwin) because of the outcast feeling; Knight took it out on himself with drugs, violence, even to his wives and partners etc., Sonia Sanchez was one, who continued to love him and was always an equal. Long ago I used to read to my all women students in the boarding school each winter “Feeling Fucked Up” one of the most liberated and celebratory poems from that era. The young women were startled then ( 80s ) at the freedom of language. “You can do that?” they’d ask. I told them they could do anything if it improved the page, taking that old saw one more step. Hayes catches the importance of all this time and writes well, including some sketchy loopy ink drawings that are perfect. 





Wave Books
 TO FLOAT IN THE SPACE BETWEEN
Terrance Hayes


Monday, January 28, 2019

HEAVEN LAKE (18) ~










Book Lover





If looks could kill

then here it is —



the famous poet 

after his reading



meeting my wife

who is asking him



to sign his books

that mean next to



nothing to her and


they both know it







Bowling






knew it was

a strike


watching her

skirt twirl







Solution






Oh how fiery we are when angry

We carry on from room to room



Our son in school

The dog and cat fast asleep



From room to room

How fiery!



And right into bed









A.M. Report






Snow overnight —

Every bird at the feeder

Looks like a hobo




————————————


Bob Arnold
Heaven Lake

Longhouse 2018