Tuesday, April 21, 2020

MIKE O'CONNOR (TRANSLATOR) ~







Overnight At A Buddhist 
Mountain Temple





Massed peaks pierce

the cold-colored sky;

a view the zazen hall

faces.



Shooting stars pass

into sparse-branched trees;

the moon one way,

clouds another.



Few people come

to this mountaintop;

cranes do not flock

in the tall pines.



One Buddhist priest,

eighty years old,

has never heard

of the world affairs.





______________________
Chia Tao (779-843)
Colors of Daybreak and Dusk
Tangram
1995













Monday, April 20, 2020

YOKEL ( 28 ) ~









Peaceable Kingdom


1

We went to the town fair

For the first time in our lives

To watch the work horses and

The work horses were there,

Somehow they never disappoint you



Led out from trailers in wraps

Of leather harness, some gilded

And special for the day —

The horses could teach anyone how

To stand, how to wait



Their heads turned the other way

From a stone sled loaded by six

Men and one more on a tractor

Who are having a difficult

Enough time managing each



Block weight onto the sled,

One after the other until

What is expected to pull

Gains to 3500 pounds and

Later double that



Three-man teams talked

Amongst themselves soon

Showing they had trouble

Of their own making

A horse pair obey —



Names Frank, Chris, Josey

Revealed an intimacy from

These tough men with bloody

Elbows dragged by reins

Along the stone sled down



A twelve foot course hollering

Hold up there! and watching

Their feet and legs aren’t

Crushed by this plowing

Entertainment drive



How does a trophy and 

One hundred fifty dollars

Grab you — awarded to the

Winner — the horse teams

Feel none of this, it is



Another day blinking

Flies and hasty sun,

Horse paired up to

Horse because they

Work best together



The least we could do

Would be to hope a little

More grain and hay came

Pitched down for them

That night, a rightful



Pat on the hind quarters,

And any of us can walk

Over to where horses

Huddle and with

No celebration or



Much of a sound,

Wait until one

Lifts his head and

Large eyes brighten

We meet





Manure






Has a way

When you’re not sure

Of having you place

That finger to your nose






Makes No Difference




Work horses

Stand in the rain

The sun, more rain

Bright leaves and snow






2






At the fair

This cow who

Knows this farmer

Won’t go easily

To the strange

Water tub tugged

By rope and hind

Legs holding back

The pinkest nostrils

Breathing ahead of

All its body along

A porcelain edge and

Always how massive

But somehow terrified

The great animal








Head down grazing

Goose thumps into

Fence post









4



Out in the open midway

Of flea market sellers

Unwrapping their tables

Look to the sky

Wondering with a

Neighbor hawker if it

Will rain — and who

Knows, none of us —

But one old-timer

Under a canopy

Slowly unpacking his

Nest of goods took no

Mind to the rain that

Seemed to be falling

All of a sudden as he

Stepped out of the

Tent and dusted off

His hat announcing

To no one it was

Only fizzling



(to be continued next week)



______________
Bob Arnold
Yokel
Longhouse
2011








Saturday, April 18, 2020

Friday, April 17, 2020

MIROSLAV HOLUB ~









Whale Songs


At two o'clock in the morning

I hear my mitral valve

from the depth of the dim, blood-filled tunnel

which is me. Cellular receptors

fit with a metallic click

into the locks

and the cells are me and the locks are me.

From some symphonic distance

there sounds the song of the whales,

and it contains me.



In some black castle

Sleeping Beauty has pricked herself on a thorn,

which is me. The clock has stopped

— in our house clocks stop at any moment

because she will prick herself at any moment,

on a tiny crock shard,

on a word,

on a milk tooth,

on a toy that has fallen into the gutter —

and so there's a still life, nature morte,

with me in the genetic background.



A paper kite stiffens in the air,

and yet, Einstein says, Time is always going, but never gone,

and yet, my mother says, ten years after her death,

Oh yes, oh yes,

and a clock starts again,

the Invisible passes through the room like a ball of lightning,

Sleeping Beauty lays eggs full of little spiders,

the whales re-enter the tunnel



and I start again

being the machine

for the production

of myself.



__________________

Miroslav Holub
The Rampage
translated from the Czech by David Young, 
Dana Habova, Rebekah Bloyd and the author
Faber 1997





Thursday, April 16, 2020

TSERING WANGMO DHOMPA ~







from  a geography of belonging




Time, pinker than the dots

on her blue shirt. A name

wasn't decided because

the lama was travelling

in a foreign country. We

were careless with our

affections. Tiny clouds

were stitched on the baby's

cap. Would she need

happiness or money?

Clouds are for the sky,

says the elder. Breasts

are for milk. Would

we have walked across

the mountains if we

listened to our feet?





~





First came pictures of animals

not found in our zoo.

Then apparatus assembled

for our benefit because

we had no money in the bank.

Even in the old country

grass was boiled for dinner.

We learn from our elders

so when they said we were

poor, we knew our job

as children. The eldest

gave up school so the youngest

could be polished for reward.

How does this translate in

your language? How can

it be that the rich are thin and

the poor are fat where you live

wrote a little boy from far away.






______________________
Tsering Wangmo Dhompa
In the Absent Everyday
Apogee Press
2002




Tsering was raised in India and Nepal




Tuesday, April 14, 2020

SCOTT NEARING ~








Back Road Chalkie
Smack in the middle of
Lockdown
April
2020



Monday, April 13, 2020

YOKEL ( 27 ) ~









G O ~ A L O N G
Y O K E L


Against the charitable gesture

there is no defence

SAMUEL BECKETT







Milking







Morning sunlight offers

Long shadows, a place of coolness



Hand size grape leaves cling to fence rails

A drop of warm light on the tips



Birds in the woods soon fly into the pasture

Sing and disappear all day



The sun lifts off the metal silo roof

Shatters into the pond



Between the barn and house

An aisle of light


                                                                    for Bill & Mary







Pals






I bought old

Tools from a

Friend since

We used the tools

Together on jobs

For years and

With him gone

I plan to work

Like we always

Have together






The Moral





You know an era

is over with the

morning you

see the local

outlaw junkyard

flatbed wrecker



with its owner’s

company name

barely scratched

onto the side doors



going by aboard

a real-deal junk-

yard flatbed hauler

on its way to town

to be sold as scrap




______________
Bob Arnold
Yokel
Longhouse
2011