Thursday, June 25, 2020

JOEL FELIX ~







On Pharmakos Farm


                                     for Tom



Join my song

flossing loopholes

'neath this spiny tree

for time has difficulty

rolling uphill  —


nothing consecutive

on this cloud-initiated mountain:

cluster and

clearing

blue flashes

on the backs of birds



the sound of cinnamon

all you get

till you're picked

on pharmakos farm

no cooling herb

from bloodless flowers

at the bottom of summer's

paper hearts



________________

Joel Felix
Limbs of the Apple Tree Never Die
Verge Books
2013






Wednesday, June 24, 2020

FRANKLIN BRAINARD ~











Song For A Widow's Marriage




Husband, I come to you, no girl,

but a woman earthed from North Dakota.

I have known the farm,

have milked cows,

have forked manure

into the spreader,

have smelt the deep ammonia

of horse urine.

I have borne the womb burden;

I have borne and bear

the woes of children,

woes that hang as unaccountable

as moon dogs or a dry dipper.

I come to you no girl

but I come rich

with peasant blood

and warm as sun-dug potatoes.

You shall have me warm beside you

when winter turns over the roof's edge;

you shall have me

like something held for winter

coming live with flavor

from the double-doored root cellar;

and, when I take the pies

from the oven

and when I take the bread

that yeasted all the kitchen

in the afternoon,

come, kiss my neck

and walk with me

through the late garden.




_____________________
Franklin Brainard
Raingatherer
Minnesota's Writer's Publishing House
1973










Tuesday, June 23, 2020

DAVID TOOP ~












Goldsmiths
U.K.
2019



Sunday, June 21, 2020

FOR HARDCORE FRNs ~









Susan and I traveled this route in 1979





Saturday, June 20, 2020

DRUMMOND HADLEY ~








Though you've forgotten who you were. . .

     though you've forgotten who you were

     when she told you her songs to sing,

though you've forgotten who you were

     who sang her songs to the air,

though you've forgotten who you were

     who could make her sing her songs,

though her arms ache for you and you want

     to come to her and you sit there

     waiting to hear her song,

the wind blows on past you over the ranges

    of blue mountains and carries her

    into the blue distances where

    your eyes can't see.







Oh thinking, feeling people:


     Laborers, presidents, blue collar workers,

     vice-presidents of governments and businesses,

     kids in blue jeans waiting out the summers,

     working in gas stations and cafes,

     smoking dope under the noses of the police,

     or screeching your tires on the roads,

     long-haired people living in leantos and old

     adobe houses spiritually resettling the land. . .



     bring to the children of the years to come

     that Indian vision of the Earth's old family

     Old vision of the Earth's old family

     Old vision of the whiteman we lost long ago

     that Homer tells was ours.


                                                              1972


____________________________
Drummond Hadley
Vision
A Curriculum of the Soul
1972





MORE!



Friday, June 19, 2020

WILLIAM WITHERUP ~








Orange Sunshine Acid Poem



1


We rode towards the stars on a crest

of marble, gneiss and schist

and were caught in the cold sweeping searchlight of eternity





2


You were the Snow Queen and I was Boris

I fought the Russians in the snow with my large red hands

As they fell on my knife their blood froze into jewels





3


I came to you and you loved me, Scheherezade

your breasts smelling of musk

and the wind in the tents





4


I can't tell you anything of love

except that it is a young woman

picking the dry rose-colored madrone leaves from her hair.





____________________

William Witherup
Love Poems
Peters Gate Press
1971










Thursday, June 18, 2020

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

PRIMO LEVI ~







In the Beginning



Fellow humans, to whom a year is a long time,

A century a venerable goal,

Struggling for your bread,

Tired, fretful, tricked, sick lost:

Listen, and may it be mockery and consolation.

Twenty billion years before now,

Brilliant, soaring in space and time,

There was a ball of flame, solitary, eternal,

Our common father and our executioner,

It exploded, and every change began.

Even now the thin echo of this one reverse catastrophe

Resounds from the farthest reaches.

From that one spasm everything was born:

The same abyss that enfolds and challenges us,

The same time that spawns and defeats us,

Everything anyone has ever thought,

The eyes of every woman we have loved,

Suns by the thousands

And this hand that writes.

13 August 1970






__________________________

Primo Levi
Collected Poems
translated by Ruth Feldman and Brian Swann
Faber & Faber






Tuesday, June 16, 2020

LIN HE-JING ~








Living
As A Recluse
On The Lake


Lakewater

Comes into the yard.

Mountains

Wind round my hut.

A recluse

Should avoid the world.



Normally shut,

The unused door's turned blue with moss.

Guests arrive,

Frightening white birds to flight.

Selling herbs,

I almost hate to price them,

Love watering the garden

According to nature.



And how about

India Road

Through the woods,

Still reaching deep autumn

In a distant,

Blue dream?


________________
Lin He-Jing
Recluse-Poet of Orphan Mountain
Brooding Heron Press 1993
translated by Paul Hansen