Monday, October 31, 2016
Thoughts on the U.S. Presidential Election
Friday, October 28, 2016
Odes by Hölderlin: The Peace
Returned in an even more terrible transformation,
To clean, since it was necessary,
So it gaped and grew and surged from year to year
To restlessly inundate the distressed land
In egregious battle, so well veiled
And so dark and pale was the head of man.
The heroic forces flew, like waves, onward
And dwindling away, reduced you, avenger!
It was often the servant's quick work
O you, the relentless and undefeated
Before the cowardly and too powerful,
Strike until the last rank is down and
His impoverished clan trembles from the blow,
The secret that you in spike and bridle hold
To suppress and to further, O Nemesis,
You still punish the dead, that now sleep
Under laurel in Italy’s gardens,
The old conquerors otherwise undisturbed.
And if you don't spare the idle shepherd too,
Finally having taken well enough
Who started it? Who brought the curse? It is not
Measure’s lost, our fathers did not know,
Too long, too long already have mortals stepped
With pleasure on each other’s heads, man battled
Over who would rule, feared his neighbor,
And found no mercy upon his own ground.
In ferment and froth across generations
The sorrowful lives of the ever poor.
But you wander quietly on your sure path,
O Mother Earth, in the light. Your springtime blooms
Vary the melodies as ages
Accumulate, that’s your journey through life!
Come now, thou holiest of all the Muses,
Beloved of the stars, revive and renew
This peace we have longed for, give us one
Remain of life, one heart for us again.
And like the other spectators, the judge looks
With an earnest smile upon the race-tracked young,
Drifting their chariots through dusty clouds,
Thus Helios stands, and smiles all around us,
And lonely are the divine, never happy,
Because they live forever, aethers
Der Frieden
Wie wenn die alten Wasser, die in andern Zorn,
Thursday, October 27, 2016
Imperio do real II
Mesquite and sajuaro are as elusive as you want them to be,
Kind enough to exist or not, as we please.
Punctured like a scalpel and left to fester and boil,
The red flesh stretched in stripes over exposed muscle,
Volcanic shoulders draped before the lace of the sea,
While bony trees on pocked plateaus were swept up in the wind,
Catholic, incessant, life-affirming ...
With scattered haciendas on the highlands, severe pueblos near shore.
They are useless except as beauty, a pose of nothing left to lose,
But still holding a place in the implicate order, universal
As they stand alone, unwanted, unknown, but no less hermetic
Than the cities, only more resolute in their resistance, their infinite
Clarity –
That touch up the hillsides with columns and fountains
And the textures and colors of heaven, filled in by the imagination
While the sun-burnt damianas hold the real safe from us,
Who would only sleep in its comforts without dreaming,
That thing that we do best.
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
Odes by Hölderlin: To Landauer
The merchandise round and about.
Sei froh! Du hast das gute Los erkoren,
Tuesday, October 25, 2016
San Diego Clouds
Wearying how everything breaks
Like waves the same ways as one ages,
Disappointment locks in like a cool breeze
With the luxury accommodation.
I hold you and you disappear
Except for your spirit.
Am I alone when I'm with you
Less than when you're not there?
Monday, October 24, 2016
Odes by Hölderlin: The Passed On
Friday, October 21, 2016
Thursday, October 20, 2016
Ode to the Smart People
Blind mind feels its way through the grooves of the hole
Like they are accidents of design ...
That's the way it lives,
All sense and reaction, whatever is out there a black prompt
Which may or may not know, how tongues are predictable,
Draw limited conclusions, and how whatever crack is sensed
Can be re-sealed with ease ...
How illumination
Is the perishable food, in a trap that sets it free.
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Terpsichore
For everything of earth and sky must move,
For karma flows like clouds across the blue.
And pain too much the same to feel yours too.
You still believe in one almighty: light
Glorifying like your sight the tired afternoon.
Only love, aswirl in constant orbit, and too entwined to touch.
Monday, October 17, 2016
Odes by Hölderlin: Go Under, Beautiful Sun
Friday, October 14, 2016
Stevens Textplication #34: Another Weeping Woman
The dreamer wakes up, however, in the last stanza, with a man beside her that she can’t turn into a phantasy (a lighter and more willful form of imagination, where a loved one for example can be turned into a fancied hero rather than perceived into being). “Him for whom no phantasy moves” enigmatically describes someone who could be implacable, impossible to fantasize about, completely unimaginative, or dead.
The prevailing sense, however, is that when the curtains of the imagination are lifted, there is nothing behind it that is real. We construct love affairs out of pheromones and moonbeams, never thinking that is all there is to it, a trick to facilitate a shared delusion of separate minds. OK, maybe we do, but it is not a good feeling when we do, for it is like, as Stevens so aptly puts it, being “pierced by a death.” The inconsolable weeper truly cannot be consoled, because she is in a different realm.
Thus the grief of the first stanza is, in contemporary parlance, “paid off” by the death in the last. This leads many readers to conclude that the woman is weeping over her dead husband (or son). The widow trope, however, is only a metaphor for the real action, which is the death of a relationship (or the illusion of a relationship) through the awareness that it was imagined into (and out of) existence. Why else would she be crying before the death?
Still, the context remains ambiguous after many readings, in large part because the poem intentionally obscures the relationship between the speaker and the weeping woman. Do they know each other? Is the speaker the subject of her tears? Is it a veiled reference, heaven forfend, to Stevens himself and his wife? The poem exists in a nether world between an uncomfortably close personal – but undisclosed – conflict, and a rigorously strict abstraction about how all relationships are false. I guess that’s what we all do, poets or not, generalize our petty sufferings into universal truths.
Another great American poet, Emily Dickinson, was, in my view, the undisputed master of painting over uncomfortable life events with a luminous veneer of hermeneutic transcendence. Here is a poem* of hers that covers, I think, much the same emotional ground as “Another Weeping Woman.” It has it all – scientific materialism vs. religion, religion vs. occult spiritualism, fate vs. free will, skepticism vs. faith (and that’s just in the first 21 words!) – but in true Dickinsonian fashion, these concepts are conflated and problematized at lightning speed into something eerie and otherworldly: one only has faith because one already has doubt, our perception of memory and all the personal stuff it contains limits our notion of heaven, people are interchangeable and wholly indistinct at the soul level. But underlying all the metaphysical ground that’s covered – what makes the poem so powerful – is some unspoken personal dispute that creates a backdrop of tragic distance: The way “Sister” is repeated wearily, insistently, as the arguments are reconfigured, the way “Sue” and “Emily” are one, although Susan can’t acknowledge such a fact. That, my friends, is poetry.
Thursday, October 13, 2016
The Last Surrender
You're free of any dialogue,
That coupling thing's been safely put to bed,
No questions ring the hollows of your heart.
You've been redeemed again in water,
Returned to tempering fire,
Your memory is immortal.
You've burned through heaven once again
Eviscerating love,
A gift you gave yourself to learn
What you have done, but will you?
My gift is not to know.
The infinite I gave must equal zero.
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
Street Scene
At the indigenous resistance
The drummers are not putative,
They beat the drops of water stolen
And the law comes to enforce
Their submission into silence
With violence.
The feathers on their heads
Came from copters that descended
At midnight on the pens
For the specialists with gloves
Who shoved the chickens into crates.
And their warpaint isn't blood
But communion petrolatum
Still the fracking thunder comes
Like nuclear Kippur
Upon the burning man inevitable
That the organs of the well-informed
Ignore.
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
Stagecraft
The truth-teller
And liar,
The bad black sheep seed
Trying to be good
By naming all the evil,
And the good scapegoat heart
Corrupted by belief
In its own goodness.
It's time for the posing of the problems
That can't be fixed by jumping off a cliff,
Time for posting some placard solutions
Pulled from the short-attention-span heavens
And shattered like china on the ground.
Despite all the snake-eyed lies
We still can't believe our lying-ass eyes
That the pain that begs among us is ours
Masquerading as another hand
Outstretched to our ruinous food,
And that the secrets of the few
Are still locked inside our hearts
Poisoned by the shackles once again.
We are the people who ring other's necks
And feel other's deaths as our own,
Who don't care about what's going on
(Much less whether it's right or wrong)
But who know the cost in our bones
Of believing in what we don't know.
Why not have faith in what cannot exist?
In dragons slain and starlets won,
In justice arriving on time,
In truth as an answer to the sickness inside,
In a voice we can feel as our own.
Monday, October 10, 2016
Odes by Hölderlin: I Will Go Every Day ...
Through the green leaves of the woods, to the spring soon,
To the rock, where roses are in bloom,
To view the land from the hill, though nowhere,
And into the air all the words disappear;
Devout, I have only been with you
...
Yes, I’ve been far from you, face of an angel,
And in the fading melody of your life
No more is overheard of me; O where
Did the magical heartsongs go, that calmed
Me once with the stillness of the heavenly?
How long has it been? O how long! The youth has
Aged, even the earth, which gave me back
Always good! The soul separates and returns
To you each day, and it cries to you the eye,
That it is bright again, where you go,
Where you stay, wherever you gaze across.
Friday, October 7, 2016
Hawaiiana
As the lavender smoke of breathing clouds
Roosts in shadow for the night.
The palm fronds edged with rust
Were worthy of our imaginings,
The thick-fingered grasses
Have never stopped waving gold.
The fur-draped mountains
With moving silver crowns
Stayed fiercely protective
Like arrowheads poised in the sky
As the spirits were unveiled inside of me
On their flight to Polihale.
But there's a limit to the generosity
Of spirit.
The stars so pure and piercing
In galaxies woven in webs
Are overwhelmed by blots of cloud
Like figures of a dreamed earth,
But the stars burn through
The overhang
Like eyes,
And the centurions appear again.
The homeland channel throbs.
Thursday, October 6, 2016
Loneliness on Secret Beach
Rooster rainbows in the dreadlocks of the waves,
Tumescent moss directs the dripping off the caves,
The bees are making love like surgeons to hibiscus
As couples narrow distances to share the pounding swells
In white release across the folding lace of opening shells.
They take photos of each other in their complementary chairs
Before the endless thrust of surf that vents what it bears
And just as endlessly receeds along the curves
Of long-suffering sand, its bite -- not preserved.
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
Silence at Maha'aleupo
Who'd fled to Nihoa
Is gone,
And the faces on the cave
Were obsolesced
In return,
But they are still here
And I am still here
Looking on,
And the black rocks have their art
And still speak in a voice
Heard by ancient fishermen
That promised secret knowledge
If one could wear the crown
Of knowing form was only masking light.
Tuesday, October 4, 2016
Kaua'i to Her Groom
Every pore of her skin,
Moss on his rock like rouge,
Lipstick flowers on the limbs
That tremble with rain.
Giant leaves run their fingers up
Her tree trunks,
Every fern frond is arranged
To be admired,
Her rivers are alive
With quickened pulse.
Even the fallen green
Doesn't bear the color of grief,
But of held memories,
The dark rich lacquer:
Deep orange, rotten gold.
She lets the mist caress
Her every curve
And leaves a welcome mat of red
On all her shores
With cocks that crow
And offered palms.
The caves he left for her
Swirl with water,
The sound is hollow
But it's enough
For the green stars reaching
From his crags to heaven
To bloom as beauty's virgin.
Monday, October 3, 2016
Ni'ihau to His Bride
Is the final sign, to those who'd know,
That the death of the world is near.
There's not even that here;
They communicate over distances by telepathy or mail.
Once a week the boat arrives, with food stamp rations
And propane, and a chance, Christ willing, for some shopping
In Kauai on the Robinson family dime.
Left on this infertile island, spearing fish
In canoes they whittled, spending weeks
Gathering shells for the right shade of prickly pear pink
To braid a necklace for some mainland queen,
Finding water holes to grow breadfruit or taro,
Knowing every stone God by name, and all the grasses
By voice, in day-long prayers to the spirit of the flowers
No time, no money, no power & light, as inconceivable
To us as God delivering our food from our prayers.
But this can't compete with the Sunbeam hair dryer,
The guava cocktail and dashboard hula dolls
Of the needy people trying to help, be of use, be of service.
In pity, they fancy themselves the same,
Collecting shells before they're pulverized to dust.
Holding them together with unbreakable force of love.
The amniotic fire changes form, changes nature,
But is changeless just the same...
Hits the mountains here, and in its sweetness of smoke
The spiriteye sees rainbows across to the island
Always soaking in an indigo cloud, like an illusion
That like everything else important
Can suddenly disappear
Unless there's no more magic,
The sun rising in late afternoon
Can no longer be seen, and an island
Can no longer escape from its shroud
Into something we can learn from.