He had a whining tone in his voice,
the biker in his colors and boots
complaining to the receptionist
at a California motel
a present that fits me to a t Ace ― Tom Raworth (with a nod to old Stones… & stoners) a present gifted, & at arms (rah-rah) shabby old cardigan, slippers,
MoreWe started the journey on foot one morning,
After a while, found horses to ride,
Then coaches drawn by horses,
Followed by a host of other means
Of transportation-
Rizzo shacked up with his new 16-year-old girl friend for three straight days. The military Greek chorus was surprisingly tolerant with him. I suspect this was because: 1. Rizzo was Rizzo, and
MoreMost of all you blame your parents,
because they started all this fucking mess.
You tell anyone who’ll listen.
You write nasty letters in red ink
to the New York Times.
The child he was:
red crayons coloring in circles,
holes in the drywall,
empty sweatshirt sleeves
while he crossed his arms across his bare chest.
I peruse Forbes/New Yorker adverts for
private airplanes, bunkers, islands aimed at
the .1% who’ve now taken over almost
everything from way when back then when
appeared that middle class might thrive.
the time between 'before' and 'next', a constant
transition that doesn't know when transformation
ends, a moonless night
we are ambiguous beings disoriented
by an in-between stage like a rite of passage
paused, unable to name something
Dallas Bleustrom watched the taxi-cab growl down out of Seven Oaks Cemetery. He maneuvered his wheelchair over tufts of unkempt grass, rattling the pills inside his jacket pocket. He had
MoreMy writing voice will not speak to me. I don't know why, but for several weeks it has been silent. Like a bad case of autism. Not a paragraph. Not a sentence.
MoreWe eat sawdust cereal / on the beach in the / afternoon. I drink / my milk from the bowl / and you drink yours / in quiet spoonfuls.
MoreI'm looking for anyone with an interest in literature or a specific field, like poetry, book reviews, fiction, essays. Your role will be defined as a general editor or, for example "poetry
MorePedro Hermoso de Fuentebonito and Antonio Espíritu Santo mounted horses beside a third rider. The gates opened: roaring crowds made Espíritu Santo feel immortal, the feeling he loved returning to crowds. From
MoreIt was about a month after everything got all messed up, that I took Iris for Italian ices on a squinty sun-bleached late August day, and she broke down finally and told
MoreAfter limb snap and tree crash, months
of air filled with sawdust and the sounds
of wood chippers and log loaders: a mountain
shorn,
Who can conjugate madness, shadows, apparitions from the untime of legend and myth--from the world always next to the commonest, simplest scenes of everyday life. Who can know the margin, the boundaries
More“So, are you going to go see him?” Bud asked, and when Earl answered, “See Who?”, Bud smirked and said, “See who, he asks..."
MoreWhen lightning wallowed in the orchard's lap – / that raw, sudden violence from the clouds almost / offhand
MoreWe encouraged everyone to attend our reunions of embassy personnel once assigned to Bolivia. Nothing fancy. We gathered in homes around D.C., drank Bolivian beer and mate de coca, and ate salteñas
MoreI suffered from it, deep pleasure that is, pride, an inward emotion which in this one spot of time taught me hubris
MoreThe same words / In the same sequence, / Everywhere we go.
The same people, / Echo pretense / About everything we know.
MoreIt's monopoly and / you're the banker / or craps and it's / your right hand
MoreRemember that timewe reclined in the carand your own wordssplit you in two? It was kind oflike when that cooking show ladywe always watched slit open a pomegranate andruby red seeds just
MoreAnne convinces Dad to move into our upstairs guest room, a few weeks after the funeral. He and I haven’t spoken since the night of the crash. Since he stood there looking
More“Music is love in search of a word.” – Sidney Lanier Mr.Adam Fisk, high school instrumental music teacher, stood looking out his bathroom window at the glide and swell of the lawless
MoreI stood tall at thirteen, / they asked me to kiss you / goodbye, it was what / you needed,
MoreIn his book, Technopoly, media theorist Neil Postman best describes the love affair tech people have with technology: “They gaze on technology as a lover does on his beloved, seeing it as
MoreAnd all the trembling shadows, the waylaid verses, how darkening they become me now as I lean over this page, the shadows before me and beneath me and all around, the shadow
MorePeople often ask me where it all began for me, and I say different things at different times, but usually I say this: It all began for me at Bronx Lebanon Hospital
MoreI remembered you last week
leaning on the front gate
hair left in a photo album.
Fingers thicker than January wind.
1. The Esopus Creek is a gushing brown torrent this fall from the September rain, but the trees surrounding the creek shimmer with red, orange, yellow. The blue jays and chipmunks squawk
MoreThe Hurt Red-faced, open-mouthed–a silent scream in front of me–you press your small hands to your sides. At six, you live a pain so deep you cannot speak or cry. Breathless, between
MoreRogue Sparks Coming this way is cigarette ember, put out on metal receptacle ridge, wetted down with ocean air and admiral fell promises of evening balm, of little flickers in pyre wood,
More1. The Donnelly Manufacturing Company I was a graduate student. I needed money, a summer job. The clerk at the state unemployment office frowned at my questionnaire, grumbled that I was overqualified
MoreSnow and Crocuses 1. Snow and Crocuses Thanksgiving ahead, and first snows, snows and crocuses, Wordsworthian spring, implying daffodils. But first there’ll be holidays and snow, a tree to stand and dress
MoreThe Songbird Market Beijing, a man with the faith of ages Turns to offer a courteous reception. We have come to see about a bird, One whose song we clearly hear, Not
MoreFive weeks after the hospital in Oaxaca called to tell us that Mom had died of complications from a drug overdose, her ashes arrived in a DHL delivery carton left at our
MoreCome Back I will paint you over. I will revise each line. I’ll stand immersed in the dregs without a coat of stones, an anchor to be tied on. I will face
MoreMunitions Magnanimity The targets for the tolerant came with a gun rack and delayed viral police how-to videos: A ticking clock mock-calm after the lynching parties and National Guard deployments. When the
MoreProphesies The white blossoms fallen to the furrow rise again and swirl on March breeze past branches bearing the green buds of plums. The high egret circling beats an angel’s ivory wings.
MoreMore Like Horace Under a green and wilted sky, the heat softens and obscures me. Too slack to eulogize my cousin, who died of leukemia after a lifetime of sporting a beard
MoreI have bought some of your supplies. Sparse, random: a thin brush and a squat black marker, a half-full bottle of linseed oil, a gallon of turpentine. More consistent, a set of
MoreNews From North Country The bright-eyed buxom broadcaster in thick makeup her mother never quite taught her to brush on correctly suddenly engulfs and swallows up her fellow newscaster boring the hell out
MoreI Curse Thee While standing on your head. Like peanut butter. From Carlsbad Cavern. I curse thee in milk. By the string of the moon. With aphids. I hurl my curses while
MoreThe psychic held Lydia’s palm aloft, tracing the lines with black nails. Months ago, Lydia would have called bullshit and gone back through the haze of colored curtains and incense to Newbury
Moregrowing old at once sober inside the thought of the time you stood on a black cliff, over a black desert, in a martian place realizing you are still alone even in
MorePeccadillo The church bells ring each hour precisely three minutes too soon, and everyone in town shrugs off that resounding, persistent defect, performs the minor calculus required to transpose the error of
MoreJost had a job to do, and he would do it. He was as old-fashioned and square as a woodcut of a laborer carved on a tabletop. He even looked like that—tall
MoreThe Fawn Found dead in the neighbor’s yard a humid morning in July. The flies already at its eyes, its neck bent back over the place where it was torn in two,
MoreToo much August; it must be parceled night by night ingested in slippery hours. Outside the theater we find ourselves lost, wander into the first restaurant we see. Chandeliers, girls in short
MoreFor the longest time Nada was two things: one, greenblue peacock eyes that sparkle big whenever she readied herself to say something, and two, one of the longest, blackest niqabs I had
MoreEgeria densa clogs sloughs, especially during low water. Love is a lie the cup tells the coffee for the mouth. Even the eye can’t deny the parrot behind the self-denying yo-yo. An
MoreExcavations 3 A poetry denies its end in any descriptive act, I mean any act which leaves the attention outside the poem. – Robert Creeley At night in my bed in the
MoreOne Moment in the Middle of Things Virginia Beach, the late 80s – dying already. A pale imitation of its former self, the shops along the strip selling paper thin pastel t-shirts
MoreAn apple seed is stuck to a midnight tree branch. It swells and seeps red honey, sticks close to trunk-hollow and bird’s nest. What I mean by this is I love you.
MoreMy three best friends in high school were older and a bad influence. There was Pile, who loved Led Zeppelin and Hostess Twinkies. Then Slocomb, who was tall and sluggish and a
MoreAvihs || Vishnu Mornings || they disperse || beyond || the corn Fields, || separately. ||Sunday She || throws Her partner’s computer || (midnight) Into the garage.|| George ||who In many ||
MoreI sit above Sostenuto Avenue at my window in a third-floor walk-up. I’ve been on the avenue nigh on sixty years and at my present observational post for forty of those years.
MoreTo hear the axis of Earth, Earth’s axis – Osip Mandelstam The first time I heard about Paul Celan was many years ago, back in Moscow. There was a remarkable publication by
MoreFolds in an ancient fuselage orchestrate an arrangement of accents. Each accent is an accident. A moist white shirt like a waiting moon sways into oncoming traffic. _______ steps crumble new as
MoreIt would be impossible for anyone to lead a more ordinary life than Bobby Parker, whose life was ordinary to the extent that the more you saw him and the more you
MoreDead Women in Old Stories Above the hills a starry slate the lights} on the coast a necklace weight of faded-flower yellows moonlight suspends the tides the
MoreIt’s a melancholy chamber, willow wallpaper and a power-steam humidifier trying to spread calm across six pews sulking on either side of a narrow aisle leading to a white coffin sitting atop
MoreKnowing that people used to communicate with each other and express their feelings through hand-written texts made me feel somehow sad for being born in this era. In fact, with the fast
MoreHow disappointed the first flyers must have been to finally rise above the feathery white heavens and not find themselves surrounded by angels but rather the raw and exquisite beauty of nature
MoreView A white petal falls as the bee drinks the Mandarin bloom then moves on. Purple and red tin pots with orange flowers hang from the top rail of the neighbor’s
MoreAt the Corner At the corner of Division & Reclamation where the town is split between chaos & choice, the edge where you look across the tracks toward dry sage-lined hills rounded
MoreMeeting the Resistance In her twenties during World War II she joined the Netherlands resistance and cycled out to meet newcomers dropped by parachute from British planes and walked each one
MoreFrank felt edgy all week. Preparations for Bennett & Co.’s RESTORE AMERICA fund-raising tour were taking over all his time: petitioning the state for non-profit event status, circulating memos to several dozen
MoreBoundaries Lucy, boundaries might be made of Roman stone walls or hedges, but they’re boundaries all the same. I would walk through the English fields in winter and my feet sank with
More1. Revisionist Ministry of the Martians Seared almost scorched, rolling potato eyes and broccoli heads now dead, this medicated dedicated bougie meditator’s Sternoed noodle soul casserole shimmies down a dwarf shrub, boards a
MoreHenry Miller’s Typewriter How did you know that I dreamt about Henry Miller’s typewriter last night? Stolid gray Remington, with a bloodshot aura, green plastic keys, all-black ribbon, and the faintest odor
More1 At the window, last night’s words, ashen Against the glass Black petals in the vase, delicate As the hour fading from us Their deep scent stirring us From deeper dreams Sleepwalkers,
MoreMiss Dolly Bumfrey We bear Muscat To your sick by traction. Making headway at that driving test Was the needles up-and-up. Annihilating two easy-natured cherubs, En route to a wall – pop,
MoreRae Armantrout: I put a glose on you Habitat-themed enclosure. Zen-inflected mug. Around the block dogs bark at absence. Habitat (entire poem) ― Rae Armantrout (with nods to Perloff, Silliman, &
MoreHow I Like My Women I like my women slight and frail, bones hollowly light, ribcages pressed like prison bars against the skin. I love the women with stomachs caved in, divots carved
Moreyou ask me how I occupy myself in my dreams well, if I see one I see the rest I am not an optimist mostly I do not understand the work of
MoreThe Forsythia in Bloom Suddenly in the early spring evening the forsythia bush is aflame with light, a monastery with hundreds of cells. Throughout winter’s darkness, these monks had gone to bed
MoreMilton’s Well Predestination stopped her on the road, speeding in some overcommitment, racing impetuous down green skylines, pushing the envelope of the just-possible. On an S bend with reversed camber, on a
MoreFor Fred (Veteran’s Day, November 11th, 2004) We miss you, Mr. Rodgers. You told us straight. You were not purple Mr. Rodgers, not an extinct species that sang about the sun, ripping
More1. I will say our secret… a stone holding its own weight we were lovers holding each other warm in the unfolding there was a garden of silk soft buds of fabric
More