Wednesday, March 18, 2026

JEAN FOLLAIN ~




Day on Fire


The door shined in fiery daylight

but the braids of the women there

held still

one of them leaned over the waters on the cauldron

and on a piece of porcelain

a painted bird had worn itself out with singing.

The messenger was seen to come in

with a letter and a golden loaf in his hands

he spoke

then it was dead silence

and the whole garden gave up its scent.





Landscape with Two Laborers


The countyside was calm

a girl was washing her unblemished leg

and the hours

etched themselves into the cloth they faded

attacking the damask flowers.

The pages of a schoolbook

had been carried off by the wind

up above the eglantines

and down the length of the path

to ditches filled with clever beasts

to embankments covered in those herbs

favored for soothing teas

two laborers took their time

telling each other

the secrets of working with wood.





The Notice


The child pushing along the ring of a barrel

as his makeshift hoop

runs alone and shouts

but to the one who has just spelled out

beneath the N and the eagle of Empire

the draft notice

the old man says simply

in the blazing sun

while drinking a foamy pear cider:

"the next century will be worse"

though lovers go by singing.





Edge of the Hearth


The outbuildings with no real use

are left to the rains

a peasant woman

has an edge of the black hearth

for a seat

the evening turns

in swirls of her breath

the wind in the hollow tree

why beings and things

she thinks

and not nothing



_______________________________

Jean Follain

Earthly

The Song Cave 2025

translated by Andrew Seguin




Monday, March 16, 2026

Sunday, March 15, 2026

RONALD BAATZ ~

 




Their ashes

where my father used to kneel

planting

where my mother used to bend

picking




As she puts

water on for tea

from my own pile

of bones and ashes

I reassess hers





In a crowded mountain bus

the endlessly monotonous

talk about Buddhist scriptures

when all I want to listen to

are the wheels on the road





The degrees to which

the closed fairgrounds

brings in even more

spellbinding beauty

to the sunset





In early spring mist

my lover floats across fields

from one dream

of sweet grass

to another





Our old

peacefully

decaying bodies

talking to children

selling lemonade





For anyone who sings

by a small window

in a small room

in the depths of

dying light





In the bedroom

sweeping up popcorn

from the night before

I see the hopeful eyes

of birds in the window



_____________________________

Ronald Baatz

One Oblivious Orange Fish

Black Fig Press, 2026





Saturday, March 14, 2026

THE INCREDIBLE STRING BAND TONIGHT ~

 




HAN KANG ~

 



A Very Small Snowflake 


A very small snowflake, you

As if dancing

As if slowly dancing, approach

My face


Instead of falling straight down like all the other snowflakes

Somehow, you spread your wings toward my face


But where did you get to, after that?

I never saw you again.



___________________

Han Kang

from The New Yorker, Feb 16, 2026

translated from the Korean by Maya West




Thursday, March 12, 2026

HORACE SILVER TONIGHT ~

 


Horace Silver – piano.... Donald Byrd – trumpet (# 1, 3-6 & 8-10).... Hank Mobley – tenor saxophone (# 1, 3-6 & 8).... Junior Cook – tenor saxophone (# 9 & 10).... Doug Watkins – bass (# 1-8).... Gene Taylor – bass (# 9 & 10).... Louis Hayes – drums.... Bill Henderson – vocals (#10).... ...................................................................... 1. "Cool Eyes" 5:55 2. "Shirl" 4:16 3. "Camouflage" 4:25 4. "Enchantment" 6:22 5. "Señor Blues" 7:01 6. "Virgo" 5:49 7. "For Heaven's Sake" 5:09 8. "Señor Blues" (Alternative take) 6:38 9. "Tippin'" 6:12 10. "Señor Blues" (Vocal version) 6:14 ...................................................................... Recorded - November 10, 1956 (#1-8), June 15, 1958 (#9-10) Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack

DON WINSLOW'S THE FINAL SCORE ~

 


R E A D   M E


     William Morrow 2025