CONSTANCE DEMBY
1939 ~ 2021
daydreaming w/ Bob Arnold
Janine Pommy Vega (1942-2010) was born February 5 in Jersey City and grew up in Union City, N.J., the middle sibling of three. She graduated from high school as class valedictorian in 1960 and had already become intimate with major players in the Beat Generation. Gregory Corso became her liaison to life-long-friends Allen Ginsberg and Peter Orlovsky, who became her lover. She remembers as a teenager meeting Jack Kerouac asleep under a table. Her life as a poet, teacher and traveler was forever a spiritual quest for transcendence which originally took her on the road at age sixteen to New York’s Lower East Side, later a marriage and early widowhood to the Peruvian painter Fernando Vega, who died of a heroin overdose in Ibiza, Spain in 1965. Her first book of poems Poems to Fernando was one of the earliest Pocket Poets (#22) by a woman author published by City Lights Books in 1968. Her posthumous book Janina would document this restless time period for the poet between Europe, the Middle East and America. By the early 1970s Janine would spend two years as a hermit on the Isla del Sol on Lake Titicaca in Bolivia. Her prose book Tracking the Serpent has been described as a feminist “On the Road” journeying with the poet on her visits in the 1980s to matriarchal worship sites in Ireland, England, France, Nepal and the Amazon. She trained herself to become a skilled hiker throughout the Catskill Mountains which was her primary dwelling for the last forty years of her life. A devoted teacher and activist for the rights of prisoners and children, Janine made her name and legend in the New York prisons and school system. The last ten years of her life were tough, a struggle with many medical maladies, but the poet persisted, reading her poetry to the public, often with music, wherever invited. Janine Pommy Vega died of a heart attack at her home in Willow, New York on December 23, 2010.
— Bob Arnold
Janine Pommy Vega
Poems to Fernando
Longhouse, 2021
__________________
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2021
photo above ~
Morven Gregor & Gerry Loose
at home
April and Silence
Spring lies deserted.
The velvet-dark ditch
crawls by my side
without reflections.
All that shine
are yellow flowers.
I'm carried in my shadow
like a violin
in its black case.
The only thing I want to say
gleams out of reach
like the silver
in a pawnshop.
Landscape with Suns
The sun emerges from behind the house
stands in the middle of the street
and breathes on us
with its red wind.
Innsbruck I must leave you.
But tomorrow
there will be a glowing sun
in the gray, half-dead forest
where we must work and live.
The Light Streams In
Outside the window, the long beast of spring
the transparent dragon of sunlight
rushes past like an endless
commuter train — we never caught a glimpse of
its head.
The beach houses moving sideways
they are proud as crabs.
The sun makes the statues blink.
The sea of fire rages out in space
becomes a soft touch on the earth.
The countdown has begun.
_____________________________
Tomas Transtromer
The Sorrow Gondola
translated by Michael McGriff & Mikaela Grassel
Green Integer, 2010
visiting more of the tiny books,
ever gems, and typing up these
handful of the fine Swedish poet's
poems during the day of the insurrection
(January 6, 2021) on the nation's capitol
where at least one person has been killed,
and as will be said for years and years —
if this mob had been BLM activists, or peaceful activists —
instead of a mostly white sedition army who broke
into the capitol and ran amok — there would
have been mass bloodshed. Idiots first.
[ BA ]
Fishing
At times, taking the hook out,
before releasing back into the water
caught eyeing one another
in their different worlds.
A False Continuity
Seeming to me now.
I have been so many selves
unrelated one to another
though covered by the same name
and birth date, incidental facts,
dental records. More than inner self.
No sole soul, not even
look-alikes, now shrinking back
in height, adding weight.
Hard to explain this,
how now, looking back,
these selves do not know
one another.
Buddhist Scholars On Silence
Silence
so precious
they can't stop
talking about it.
_________________________
Jonathan Greene
Ebb & Flow
Broadstone, Kentucky
2021
P O E T S W H O S L E E P
______________________________________
What is it about Doug Anderson?
I used to read a new literary journal
every day, for years — who am I
kidding — for decades! and
one day I sold them all, because someone
wanted to do what I had done all
those many years reading, and staying
in-tune with who was writing —
naturally, I kept my favorites
like Coyote's Journal, Caterpillar and Origin
and now when I pick up a journal
to see what is happening out there
I often find Doug Anderson's poems —
and what is going on: Doug
Anderson's poems are most often
the very best poem(s) in there.
Journal after journal.
What do I mean?
Go downstairs and have a look.
[ BA ]
The Dark
A black dog shows up in my yard,
needle teeth under-bite and milky eyes. Wags once
and rolls over on his side,
smells like he's pissed himself. He's come a long way,
stowed in steerage with the poor of spirit (blessed
are they) but I don't want this dog, don't want his snoring,
whining in his sleep, his leg twitching. I close the door,
put on some Howlin' Wolf and get ready for bed.
But I can't sleep knowing he's out there in the cold
so I pull what's left of last week's chicken off the bone,
warm some milk. Open the door and let him in.
He sniffs and rolls his cataracted eyes around the walls,
buries his face in the bowl and slurps.
Okay, I know you're here for a while, just don't make a mess.
He cocks his head at me. What does he see, my silhouette
through milk-glass? A moon in clouds? I go to bed.
And still I can't sleep knowing he's down there all by himself
in a strange house. Down stairs again I lift his stinking hulk
into my arms, carry him upstairs and put him in my bed.
He's warm against my leg, his breathing slow.
At three A.M. I'm wide awake. I reach down and scratch his battered head.
Toward dawn I press my ear against him and listen to his heart.
Inside, a spring rising through rock.
There's a shifting deep down in the strata.
A groan, an angel being born from a chrysalis,
the morning sun at the bottom of the well.
____________________________
Doug Anderson
from the Asheville Poetry Review
Issue 29 (2019-2020)
A wise, elder poet once wrote to me to say,
"Beautiful poem, Bob, I would have been proud
to have written that poem." He taught me something.
That's how I think of Doug's poem.
Brazilian Blue
If I could create one tree
And hang it in the sky
And spray it with the living
Gold of the sun, and hold
The natural pattern of its growth,
I would ay that I had done
More than enough.
But observe where the sun
Has set against the black
Edge of the leaves,
How other leaves seem
To drift from one
Branch to another, or
Were they bird against
Tis darkwinged Brazilian sky!
Wings that edge the
Sao Paolo woods.
This flitting by,
This sudden appearance,
And inconsequence of time,
Is the moment I would
Hold before you;
Tomorrow evening it will
Have gone.
______________________
Collected Poems
Lynette Roberts
edited by Patrick McGuinness
Carcanet, 2005
________________________________________
The editor of this fascinating volume says it best:
"The Argentine-born Welsh writer Lynette Roberts
published two books of poems as dramatic, varied,
dense, elliptical and inset with verbal novelty as any
experimental poetry in the twentieth century. T.S. Eliot
her friend and editor at Faber, praised her work, complimenting
it by that most Eliotic of criteria: that it communicated
before it made sense." Robert Graves was also a close reader.
Wyndham Lewis drew her portrait, and Dylan Thomas was
best man at her wedding. And you have probably never heard
of her. No help from Lynette Roberts herself — in her later life
Roberts had a mental breakdown and stopped publishing; in fact
she refused to have her two books of poetry re-published when
interest arrived. Thus her work was largely forgotten and she died
a relatively unknown writer in 1995. (4 July 1909-26 September 1995).
It's her diaries I wish to find next.
[ BA ]