Friday, September 11, 2020

RE-READING ROBINSON JEFFERS ~








Signpost



Civilized, crying how to be human again:this will tell you how.

Turn outward, love things, not men, turn right away from humanity,

Let that doll die. Consider if you like how the lilies grow,

Lean on the silent rock until you feel its divinity

Make your veins cold, look at the silent stars, let your eyes

Climb the great ladder out of the pit of yourself and man.

Things are so beautiful, your love will follow your eyes;

Things are the God, you will love God, and not in vain,

For what we love, we grow to it, we share its nature. At length

You will look back along the stars' rays and see that even

The poor doll humanity has a place under heaven.

Its qualities repair their mosaic around you, the chips of strength

And sickness; but now you are free, even to become human,

But born of the rock and the air, not of a woman.



___________________

Robinson Jeffers
The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers
Random House 1959






We went to his house once long ago.
It's like one of those few places you can't find again.




Thursday, September 10, 2020

RE-READING THEODORE ROETHKE ~









Carnations


Pale blossoms, each balanced on a single joined stem,

And leaves curled back in elaborate Corinthian scrolls;

And the air cool, as if drifting down from wet hemlocks,

Or rising out of ferns not far from water,

A crisp hyacinthine coolness,

Like that clear autumnal weather of eternity,

The windless perpetual morning above a September cloud.




____________________

Theodore Roethke







Wednesday, September 9, 2020

RE-READING ALDEN NOWLAN ~







He Attempts to Love His Neighbours



My neighbours do not wish to be loved.

They have made it clear that they prefer to go peacefully

about their business and want me to do the same.

This ought not to surprise me as it does;

I ought to know by now that most people have a hundred things

they would rather do than have me love them.



There is television, for instance; the truth is that almost everybody,

given the choice between being loved and watching TV,

would choose the latter. Love interrupts dinner,

interferes with mowing the lawn, washing the car,

or walking the dog. Love is a telephone ringing or a doorbell

waking you moments after you've finally succeeded in getting to   
      sleep.



So we must be careful, those of us who were born with

the wrong number of fingers or the gift

of loving; we must do our best to behave

like normal members of society and not make nuisances

of ourselves; otherwise it could go hard with us.

It is better to bite back your tears, swallow your laughter,

and learn to fake the mildly self-deprecating titter

favoured by the bourgeoisie

than to be left entirely alone, as you will be,

if your disconformity embarrasses

your neighbours; I wish I didn't keep forgetting that.




_______________

Alden Nowlan
Selected Poems
Anansi 1996





If you have experienced a quarter of what Nowlan
shares with us here, you get the picture. Shirley Jackson in her
1948 harrowing short story "The Lottery" tells it another way.
As a boy my neighborhood was filled with bicycles and short-cuts.
You go back and the short-cuts aren't there.

[ BA ]




Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Monday, September 7, 2020

POETS WHO SLEEP #15 ~




P O E T S     W H O     S L E E P

______________________


                                                     drawn & scribed by Bob Arnold


















all drawings
copyright





Sunday, September 6, 2020

SONGS OF THE LITTLE HUT ~












Songs of the Little Hut
               ____________________


The sky god rains

but my hut is well thatch'd

draft free, simple

I concentrate my mind —

Rain, sky god

           rain

                                                 — Godhika





Who dwells in the little hut?

A solitary hermit

He's shed desire

He keeps a sharp mind

Oh his little hut was not

built in vain


                                                 — Kutiviharin





You have your old cottage

Now you want a new one

but friend don't you realize

a new cottage is just

             further trouble


                                                   — Kutiviharin





Irrigators channel the creeks

Fletchers straighten the

arrow shaft

Carpenters bend a plank to their will

Men of character

            give shape to the self


                                                      — Kula





The seeing one sees both

the one who sees

and the one who doesn't

The one who doesn't see

sees neither


                                                     — Vappa





My little hut pleases me

I have no need for women

Let them take their

fine clothes and trouble

            somewhere else


                                                     — Ramaniyakutika





Addictions he shook off

food, clothes, house, medicine, no longer needed

His birthplace is emptiness

He leaves tracks

like a bird

through the sky


                                                         — Vijaya





We dwell alone in the forest

old trees the woodcutter rejected

People look at me

like hell-bound creatures at someone

             going to heaven


                                                              — Vijjiputta 




______________________________________________

Enlightenment Poems from the Theragatha and Therigatha


Songs of the Sons and Daughters of Buddha
translated by Andrew Schelling and Anne Waldman
Shambhala 2020




just be honest — wouldn't you have loved to have written these poems!



Saturday, September 5, 2020

RE-READING PATRICIA HIGHSMITH ~






In July I went back to re-read Highsmith's
The Blunderer (1954) — not an entirely
successful novel by the crime master
but mostly a thrilling read for 3/4s
of the book. A slight muddle
sets in where you can sense the author
has lost her story, whereas she doesn't
in her first novel Strangers on a Train.
Compared to say, Sue Grafton, Highsmith is
Shakespeare, and anything by her, including her short
stories, are well worth frightening yourself.

[ BA ]






Friday, September 4, 2020

RE-READING LETTERS TO JANE ~






Ausable Press
2004

______________________________

Another one of those unique books
and entirely given and gifted by Carruth,
easily one of my favorite of all his titles
and the one that reveals the poet in his
kindness and love for a much younger
and dying poet Jane Kenyon.
Hayden could be a tiring crank but
there was charm and almost always
thoughtfulness to his every move and
this slim book brings it all forth.


[ BA ]







Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

VISITING JANINE ~

 




The other day we went down to the Catskills to take care of Janine Pommy Vega’s grave site. Ten years ago already we chose the red Vermont granite for her stone, and I asked that “Poet” be all there was on the stone other than her name and date. She looks awful alone there, friends.  Susan noticed that, a woman to woman eye thing. I then took Susan to Philip Guston’s grave, Musa beside him. Now the PC crowd have canceled his very large and important exhibit of art work spanning a life time because it will include his dizzy Klansmen. Wait until 2024 the artsy legislatures command. To see one of those paintings, and I have in backwater Hanover, NH, is something to behold. In the cemetery all is equal so very early in the morning in the rain.



UPDATE: GUSTON


photographs: bob arnold 




RE-READING PAUL GOODMAN ~









Proverbs of a Small Farm




If the raccoon gnaws ten percent of the corn,

don't set a trap, plant another row.



If spinach goes to seed too soon,

try it twice, then plant chard.



Don't fight the cabbage worms

if store-bought is good and cheap.



Do very little "on principle".

life is hard enough as it is.



Honor the weeds that love your land

and call them flowers, they seed themselves.



When phoebes nest in the barn, you have no choice

but to leave the big door open also to thieves.



Many things will grow in the North Country

that they don't grow,

but then it's hard to give away your surplus

that they won't eat.



Nature is profligate, usury is natural,

but you must not pocket the increase.



One spring when the snow melts, my asparagus

will finally be big enough for someone else to eat.






________________________
Paul Goodman
Collected Poems
Random House, 1974


edited by Taylor Stoehr with a birds-eye view of Paul Goodman
from his good friend George Dennison who well understood the
ways & means of poets, anarchists, educators and philosophers
of all stripes, which Goodman certainly was. 





Monday, August 31, 2020

LAST CHANCE ~

 



R E A D      M E


Windy Dipa Rhoads





POETS WHO SLEEP #14 ~




P O E T S     W H O     S L E E P

______________________


                                                       drawn & scribed by Bob Arnold

















all drawings
copyright