Thursday, October 25, 2018
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
BOOK LOVE ~
Todd Bol, Creator of Little Free Library Movement, Dies at 62
Image


Monday, October 22, 2018
HEAVEN LAKE (4) ~
Go !
On the window —
raindrop chasing
What The Rain Brings
The reason I mention rain
And the junkyard up river is
That many times in the past
When the spring rain came
And the river went high
It would flow like nobody’s
Business straight through the
Old barn on the junkyard
Property and think nothing
Of picking up and sailing away
Any scrap metal part or bumper
And refrigerator door and I
Could be a mile down river
And seeing nothing much
Until I saw all this flow past
Specifics
To be specific
this is what the mother
of the young men who had the camp-
site on our land did —
she refused to assist us to move her family off our property
and back onto her own land, and she has plenty
she threw her garbage onto our land
when the law was called in to help us with the matter
she lied between her teeth
and when the law left and they set up
a no trespassing ordinance against her to
stay off our land, she went onto our land
in clear defiance and dared us to do something
about it
so we did —
we called the law back
they came
clamped her down with more headaches
what was learned?
she lies
Know What You Do
What does it all mean?
it means times have changed
and we’re supposed to change with it
take the quiet, the river, the old
road, animal lore, secret pathways
respect for stick, leaf and silence
and throw it all away
do as we please
barge where we barge
litter as we like
you don’t know what sort of
agreement and law and universe
you are asking to destroy when
you do this
—————————
Bob Arnold
Heaven Lake
Longhouse 2018
Sunday, October 21, 2018
Saturday, October 20, 2018
THE MUSE ~
O W E N G I N G E R I C H
"Peterson's book portrays Galileo in a wonderfully
fresh perspective. Over several decades I have
steeped myself in Galileo biographies, and it's really
rare to find an account as intriguing as this one."
We Agree
Harvard University
Friday, October 19, 2018
Thursday, October 18, 2018
Wednesday, October 17, 2018
AWE ~
After the Apocalypse There is Only the Apocalypse
The sun came streaming in
Melting the things in the room
The papers crumbled into a black heap
The furniture crawled and then disappeared
The fire in the sun is a person
He and I once ate lunch
On the moon we sat with a blanket and a picnic basket
He said the world before us is nothing compared
To the fire in his heart and the fire in God
That makes the whole world
Thump in a beating music, heartbeats and mountains
That makes the bluebird in the tree
Swoop down to a small river
And wet his silky blue body
A red worm in his mouth
And the sun a yellow light on his back.
————————
AWE
Dorothea Lasky
Wave Books 2007

Tuesday, October 16, 2018
THE TRAVELING FEAST ~
I'm reading this book in June and will be in no hurry to post
a short notice — sort of a feckless book,
yet a generous subject by the author to pay
tribute to his "heroes" (writers) by visiting
them at their homes and preparing a meal,
if they so desire. Some decline. Bass admits he
would decline such an offer! . .and away we go.
I personally am attracted to many of the
writers Bass visits so I read the book,
cringing here and there.
[ BA ]
Little, Brown
2018
Labels:
Barry Lopez,
Doug Peacock,
Food,
Gary Snyder,
John Berger,
Rick Bass,
Terry Tempest Williams
Monday, October 15, 2018
HEAVEN LAKE (3) ~
A Hurricane & Its People
It happened just like this —
we had a hurricane
and then a flood
and both were termed
“100 year events”
which means no one
around now had ever
seen anything like this before —
not the road workers who would
have to rebuild all the roads
not the town officials who had to walk
in the muck and seem like they were officiating
none of the people standing there destitute
none of the woods where we lived had any idea either
it just parted with the waves, trees went away, and
the day and the night time roared
our bodies still went to sleep
our bodies still got up
the sun shone again
the river slowly but surely subsided
some houses were gone forever
hundreds of thousands of trees vanished
roads to get us places were gone
bicycles came out
you could walk but our woods neighbors
insisted on driving, and one time we came
home on our bicycles and caught a straight course
on what was once the road but it now was a river
bed of dry rock and rubble and mistreatment
and it seemed like every neighbor
at the same time was trying
to drive on this old road memory as
a river bed, with the flooded river receded
and it was the largest traffic jam we’d ever seen
and will probably ever see out here in the woods
since percentages say it won’t happen again until 100 years
naturally
it will take that long to get this image
out of my memory
II.
And another time after that hurricane and flood
we were hiking along the river on our land
to have a look around, to see what was out of place
and we found a campsite tucked away
as if trying to hide
built there by neighborhood boys
old enough to build something nice out of stone
and old enough to ask permission to build it on our land
except they didn’t
they just took the land over
made their campsite
had their friends over
built a big fire and drank with
their friends and enjoyed themselves
when we found the campsite it looked
like something out of a King Arthur time
well placed stones in a ring and some built into
chairs like thrones — someone had put a great deal
of thought into the sacred site — it would take
savvy to move them off and put the stones away
this had to happen, we don’t want fires on our land
or drinking
or partying
we want the land as land
beautifully devoid of man
growing leaves, lichen, and solitude
but for the time being we knew the young men
needed a place for counsel, a place to prove themselves
as victors and survivors after the hurricane, and a party
now and then is good for this
so we let time pass, through winter
until spring, and then we spoke to
the young men’s mother, almost a knot
in shape, walk and disposition
she wanted nothing to do with our ideas
for our own land, she saw nothing wrong
with her children out of her house and freely
distributed to our land and their campsite while
regaining her own place in her own house
so things became unfortunate
we broke apart the campsite ourselves
dealt with the young men and all that ugly
further worse with the mother, never mind
the majority who live on our road, siding
against us and believing people should be
able to do as they wish
except of course when you wish to do it to them
overnight the world had become rotten
or to be kinder — confused
and still it snowed
apple trees blossomed
gardens grew
birds sang
—————————
Bob Arnold
Heaven Lake
Longhouse 2018
photograph ~
Flooded Green River at the
Eunice Williams Covered Bridge
Greenfield, MA.
2011
Labels:
Bob Arnold (Heaven Lake),
Hurricane Irene,
Vermont
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