Poem-a-Day April 9, 2015: tulips like ravens

On Gardens

When I read about the garden
designed to bloom only white flowers,
I think about the Spanish friar who saw one
of my grandmothers, two hundred years
removed, and fucked her. If you look
at the word colony far enough, you see it
traveling back to the Latin
of inhabit, till, and cultivate. Words

that would have meant something
to the friar, walking among the village girls
as though in a field of flowers, knowing
that fucking was one way of having
a foreign policy. As I write this, there’s snow
falling, which means that every
angry thought is as short-lived as a match.
The night is its own white garden:

snow on the fence, snow on the tree
stump, snow on the azalea bushes,
their leaves hanging down like green
bats from the branches. I know it’s not fair
to see qualities of injustices in the aesthetics
of a garden, but somewhere between
what the eye sees and what the mind thinks
is the world, landscapes mangled

into sentences, one color read into rage.
When the neighbors complained
the roots of our cypress were buckling
their lot, my landlord cut the treet down.
I didn’t know a living thing three stories high
could be so silent, until it was gone.
Suddenly that sky. Suddenly all the light
in the windows, as though every sheet

of glass was having a migraine.
When I think about that grandmother
whose name I don’t even know, I think of
what it would mean to make a garden
that blooms black: peonies and gladiolas
of deepest purple, tulips like ravens.
Or a garden that doesn’t bloom at all: rocks
poised on clean gravel. When the snow stops,

I walk to see the quiet that has colonized
everything. The main street is asleep, except
for the bus that goes by, bright as a cruise ship.
There are sheet cakes of snow on top
of cars. In front of houses, each lawn
is as clean as paper, except where the first cat
or raccoon has walked across, each track
like a barbed-wire sash on a white gown.


Rick Barot, Poetry magazine (May 2013)

Poem-a-Day April 8, 2015: Orange and Grape

Ballad of Orange and Grape

After you finish your work
after you do your day
after you’ve read your reading
after you’ve written your say —
you go down the street to the hot dog stand,
one block down and across the way.
On a blistering afternoon in East Harlem in the twentieth
century.

Most of the windows are boarded up,
the rats run out of a sack —
sticking out of the crummy garage
one shiny long Cadillac;
at the glass door of the drug-addiction center,
a man who’d like to break your back.
But here’s a brown woman with a little girl dressed in rose
and pink, too.

Frankfurters frankfurters sizzle on the steel
where the hot-dog man leans —
nothing else on the counter
but the usual two machines,
the grape one, empty, and the orange one, empty,
I face him in between.
A black boy comes along, looks at the hot dogs, goes on
walking.

I watch the man as he stands and pours
in the familiar shape
bright purple in the one marked orange
orange in the one marked grape,
the grape drink in the machine marked orange
and orange drink in the grape.
Just the one word large and clear, unmistakable, one each
machine.

I ask him : How can we go on reading
and make sense out of what we read? —
How can they write and believe what they’re writing,
the young ones across the street,
while you go on pouring grape into orange
and orange into the one marked grape —?
(How are we going to believe what we read and we write and
we hear and we say and we do?)

He looks at the two machines and he smiles
and he shrugs and smiles and pours again.
It could be violence and nonviolence
it could be white and black     women and men
it could be war and peace or any
binary system, love and hate, enemy, friend.
Yes and no, be and not-be, what we do and what we don’t do.

On a corner in East Harlem
garbage, reading, a deep smile, rape,
forgetfulness, a hot street of murder,
misery, withered hope,
a man keeps pouring grape into orange
and orange into the one marked grape,
pouring orange into grape and grape into orange forever.


For a recording of Muriel Rukeyser reading “Ballad of Orange and Grape” as well as a discussion of the poem, check out this PoemTalk podcast #78: How can they write and believe?

Poem-a-Day April 7, 2015: loaded donkey

Hello Friends,

Long Beach poet David Hernandez is a master of repetition in today’s poem-a-day “Mosul” from his 2011 collection Hoodwinked. I couldn’t quite decide today between war and grapes, so for a runner-up see also “Museum Guard” from Hernandez’s 2003 collection A House Waiting for Music.

And for other masterful examples of repetition, see also Marilyn Hacker’s “Rune of the Finland Woman,” Ann Lauterbach’s “Hum,” or William Shakespeare’s King Lear.

Enjoy.
Ellen


Mosul

The donkey. The donkey pulling the cart.
The caravan of dust. The cart made of plywood,
of crossbeam and junkyard tires. The donkey
made of donkey. The long face. The long ears.
The curled lashes. The obsidian eyes blinking
in the dust. The cart rolling, cracking the knuckles
of pebbles. The dust. The blanket over the cart.
The hidden mortar shells. The veins of wires.
The remote device. The red light. The donkey
trotting. The blue sky. The rolling cart. The dust
smudging the blue sky. The silent bell of the sun.
The Humvee. The soldiers. The dust-colored
uniforms. The boy from Montgomery, the boy
from Little Falls. The donkey cart approaching.
The dust. The laughter on their lips. The dust
on their lips. The moment before the moment.
The shockwave. The dust. The dust. The dust.

Poem-a-Day April 6, 2015: Inward lush unpetaling purpose

Hi Friends,
I saw over 300 wild dolphins today, which is totally magical and poetic. So we’re featuring a dolphin poem-a-day —
 
Dolphins at Seven Weeks

Inward lush unpetaling purpose in pink blooms of sleep, and I no longer needed to be separate. I was living there then, at the edge of the sea. And my friends came to visit, trying for a baby, not sure how to read me on that island of dozy sunlight. And there it was: familiarity edged with fear, the way we’d feed each other sandwiches and wonder if we should have wanted something other. We walked the folded cliffs over conifer fronds and mud runneling rocks slick with dropped fruit and rotting camellias to pause at the first ridge. We looked through high pines at the blue moving tides, then his finger caught a snag in the water and another and we saw — glinting fins wheeling the sheen, thousands playing in pods coming closer like the souls slippering into our bodies, attached to matter as flippers angle into a ferrying strand. We too are a species, I realized. We too could know that as joy.


“Dolphins at Seven Weeks” by Rachel Jamison Webster appeared in the March 2013 issue of Poetry magazine.

Poem-a-Day April 5, 2015: fleecy

Hello Friends,

For Easter, I thought I’d send you the best use of the word oology in a poem — but I couldn’t find one! Such a poetic word, I’m certain there must be a poem-a-day-worthy oology poem out there in the world somewhere — perhaps you know of one? Please send it to me. Or write it and then send it to me.

In the meantime, the award for best use of lambent in a sonnet goes to Patty Seyburn — who deliciously considers the human condition at the intersection of believing in an afterlife and eating baby animals for dinner.

Enjoy.
Ellen


On Cooking a Symbol at 400 Degrees

I butterflied Australian rack of lamb
with shallots, garlic, parsley, butter, wine
(some in the pan, some for the palate).
Although the livestock loved in nursery rhyme
avoided clumps of mint, it served my family
nonetheless. I am no PETA zealot
(leather jacket, handbag, wallet, shoes)
but wonder if the deeds we do pursue
us in the afterlife. Does the fleecy
creature have a tenderable claim?
My lambent mind considers our short lease
on life, the oven hot. Am I to blame?
Who gave thee such a tender voice? asked Blake.
Myself am Hell. I watch the mutton bake.


“On Cooking a Symbol at 400 Degrees” by Patty Seyburn was also featured for Poem-a-Day April 2, 2010.

For the Blake reference, see “The Lamb” (and “The Tyger”). Seyburn’s train of thought then transitions to Satan’s famous line from John Milton’s Paradise Lost — a work that greatly influenced Blake.

Poem-a-Day April 4, 2015: Birdsong

Rain fell on one man,
he ran into his house.

But the swan spread its wings and said,
“Pour more on me of that power
I was fashioned from.”


Hello Friends,

Today’s ruba’i or Persian quatrain was translated by Coleman Barks for a collection of Rūmī’s most spring-ful works entitled Birdsong (MAYPOP Athens Georgia 1993).

I hear Doria Roberts “Caught in the Rain” when I read this poem; hear Leda; hear a middle school science teacher explaining what percentages of our bodies are made of water, what percentages of the earth waters cover…

— Ellen

Poem-a-Day April 3, 2015: Key and Lock

Hello Friends,

Happy Friday, and I hope you’re enjoying National Poetry Month!

I don’t know that I’ve ever read a poem with just one “hidden” meaning the reader was meant to “unlock.” But I do know one poem you can read with a key — from the Scottish poet Robin Robertson, first printed in a January 2000 issue of The New Yorker.

A very happy birthday to Dara today, who showed me the locks and keys of Kraków this past fall —

Enjoy,
Ellen

 
Wedding the Locksmith’s Daughter

The slow-grained slide to embed the blade
of the key is a sheathing,
a gliding on graphite, pushing inside
to find the ribs of the lock.

Sunk home, the true key slots to its matrix;
geared, tight-fitting, they turn
together, shooting the spring-lock,
throwing the bolt. Dactyls, iambics—

the clinch of words—the hidden couplings
in the cased machine. A chime of sound
on sound: the way the sung note snibs on meaning

and holds. The lines engage and marry now,
their bells are keeping time;
the church doors close and open underground.

Poem-a-Day April 2, 2015: Kissing the moon

Moonlight Night: Carmel

Tonight the waves march
In long ranks
Cutting the darkness
With their silver shanks,
Cutting the darkness
And kissing the moon
And beating the land’s
Edge into a swoon.


Hello Friends,

It gives me shivers to think Langston Hughes once stood exactly where I’ve stood, looking out over the same magic landscape that is the beach after dark in Carmel, California. Today’s poem-a-day is from the 1959 edition of his Selected Poems — though several of his poems were first published in the Carmel Pine Cone.

Do you have a poem like that — one that makes you shiver with recognition of a path you walked or shoes you wore?

— Ellen

Poem-a-Day April 1, 2015: Gather

Gather

Some springs, apples bloom too soon.
The trees have grown here for a hundred years, and are still quick
to trust that the frost has finished. Some springs,
pink petals turn black. Those summers, the orchards are empty
and quiet. No reason for the bees to come.

Other summers, red apples beat hearty in the trees, golden apples
glow in sheer skin. Their weight breaks branches,
the ground rolls with apples, and you fall in fruit.

You could say, I have been foolish. You could say, I have been fooled.
You could say, Some years, there are apples.

 
Hello Friends,

Happy National Poetry Month!

It’s that time of year again: 30 days, 30 poems, 30 poets, hand-gathered and delivered fresh to your inbox by yours truly for the duration of the month.

No prior poetry experience is required to enjoy this poem-a-day list! So feel free to spread a little poemlove around this April: Pass along an apple, or other fruits you find here, to friends and loved ones.

Have you been April’s fool? Was it worth it?

Poet Rose McLarney has, as she shares in today’s poem-a-day selection “Gather” from her 2012 collection The Always Broken Plates of Mountains. What other poems or poets do you hear gathered between her lines?

Cheers,
Ellen

POEM-A-DAY APRIL 2014