Let it be decreed and duly inscribed:
The word of a poet’s passing
Shall be accompanied
By a pealing pandemic
Multitude of reads!
new old kid on the blog, with an occasional old or new poem written off the old writer's block
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Village Coffeehouse, Summer 1969
Sunday morning after church, 40 years ago: My mother's brother's coffeehouse in my home village of Remmatia--one refrigerator, one sink, one tiny butane cooker for the preparation of Greek coffee, three small round metal tables, a few wooden chairs, a hard-packed dirt floor, and the village's only telephone.
From left to right: My first cousin on my father's side of the family, my father, the village priest, my uncle, my cousin John on my mother's side--the only person still alive--all captured in a room inundated with incredible, bright late morning light.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Machiavellian
Comforting
To know poets are
As good as their word—
It’s their politics
That’s disturbing.
To know poets are
As good as their word—
It’s their politics
That’s disturbing.
Friday, November 20, 2009
À Rebours
Concealed
In the golden autumn
Leaves of the Judas tree,
There is a solitary
Goldfinch
Whose every note threatens
Betrayal.
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Morning
The village was a hard place--a few white squares against
the mountain. No wells, no streams, a taste of cisterns on
the widow's lips who had brought him food--white cheese,
hard gray bread, black olives. She watched him eat and
told him to stay for the cool hours of evening and the
morning that would come alive like the light moving along
her lips now.
(From Sentences, 1976)
the mountain. No wells, no streams, a taste of cisterns on
the widow's lips who had brought him food--white cheese,
hard gray bread, black olives. She watched him eat and
told him to stay for the cool hours of evening and the
morning that would come alive like the light moving along
her lips now.
(From Sentences, 1976)
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