Saturday, September 4, 2010
Monday, August 30, 2010
An old description of Niagara Falls-Parrish, Robinson, Amy Bennet, Ensor , di Giovanni





AN OLD DESCRIPTION OF NIAGARA FALLS
We could not see where
The end of the land came.
The French told us we must
Leave the water and walk
For a distance of many leagues
Because of a great waterfall
That would not allow us passage upstream.
These woods were old,
Filled with highways
And worn places, used by men.
The night we heard the
Waterfall was memorable. It
Seemed a constant wind that
Did not move the trees at all.
All sound. And then
The place itself. The voice of water
Articulate and incessant
Filling all of consciousness
For enormous moments.
There could not be such a place.,
Yet there it was.
Day and night forever
Through such time as man
Cannot but fancy.
All the choirs of the angels
Singing together precisely,
In this manner, so it seemed.
The greens, the whiteness,
The bows of colored light
By day and pale ghosts of
Them in the moonlight.
This must be what prayer
Was like in power and in voice.
All our lives we bathed our
Memories in this gift.
We joined it to our children,
Drove it through our dreams,
Hovering near its mists as long
As soul would cling to flesh
And then we joined this voice;
The rapids and the rills,
The clicking of the rocks,
The huge sighing of the
Place as it continues
Its descriptions with water.
I hear you hearing this.
All of us hear you hearing this.
It is a rushing through the seasons,
A mouth unlike any other.
We look into your eyes. You look into time itself,
The way all life understands it,
Full and incomplete,
Always moving. Time is water.
Time is the huge falling
That we saw here, surely
A fair description.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Three painting by Stanislav Plutenko that I admire plus a lovely tram painting by Jacob Schinkaneder from c. 1910 and three poems of mine.




Michael Madden is a genius whose music never fails to inspire me
TRAINS
for Michael Madden
The sound of the train owns the night.
It finds itself in all the distances and landscapes.
We need never move and it swirls by, mars light orbiting,
Wiping the night as if it had an intelligence. It does not.
It is not there. It is gone before we hear the sound.
We may see it in the distance crossing a trestle or
Running into a central valley full to overflowing with
Red cars and tank cars and flatcars and cattle cars.
We are not invited to see its passing, waiting
In an automobile at the edge of the track at night, the clack-clacking
Trucks counting something, gone now. A single red eye
At the end of the snake’s body winking out in the huge night.
This beast is the neuron, the impulse moving on its own
Highways through our county, known by all, coated with its
Own history and lore, its legends and heros and more steam,
Diesel smoke and soundtracks for dreams than that body
Can absorb. It is our magic glowing room throwing itself
Through the great American night as cities and towns flash
By, always on its way to somewhere, crying the land in steel voices
.
ULTIMATE LENITION
I didn’t mean to speak
That softly and get lost
in your voice, but here I am
Unhinged and dangling,
Changed from strong
To weak just by the sound
Of your voice calling to me.
THREE GIRLS
The wind begins to describe
The movements of three girls
Who believe themselves to be
Messengers of a group
Dreaming the sounds of all
Beings breathing together.
As if a dance of this
Kind were possible without
Words.
What is possible is to hear this voice,
In patterns of rain across
The concrete, against car
Windows, racing down the superhighways,
Leaning upon the surface of the water.
Nothing will come of this detailed
Report. It will be simply weather,
A late arrival at a glittering doorway,
The arc of headlights
Around a street corner,
Necklaces of lights, the night only.
Should we see these girls
Without this kind of late brilliance
About them, they will seem
On their way to school,
Talking together, puffs of
Laughter mixing just above
The hiss of tires, disappearing
Toward the park, becoming
A part of the evening.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
The poems and four random photos




COMING TO OUR SENSES AGAIN
When I touch you, all is mystery.
Ripples through the skin
Unlock one thousand doors
Within, stretches a history
Almost too much to pin
Down, to clutch, fingertips
Whorling, whirling, waking to
Knowing angels, breathing in the wind.
When I see you, see you,
See you clearly, really see
You there, before me, morning
Wound round you, nearly
Pushing up, neat as a hemline,
Every time I see you, me, we, thee,
These, together without sound,
Dancing eyes in the field of delight.
When I hear you, speaking,
Singing, loosing the girdle
Of language, untying the verbs
That wind around us
Like the ghosts of kings,
Full and with their million stories
Moving on your lips, alive again.
A music flaunted before time.
Your mouth moving to shape the fields
Where words are the kingdom and sound
The castle keep.
When I smell you, in the room.
Nothing in the room.
Proust tells us that when we find
A memory from smell alone,
It is the most powerful.
It is the one most kind,
The true bone from which
The flesh is grown to grace
Again. Rooms of you fill and fall
Away to empty space.
A chemical disturbance of the mind.
Nothing in the room, in the room,
When I smell you.
When I taste you, mouth to
Mouth or drawing with the tongue
To find the salty landscapes there,
There is suddenly no room for
Sense to be other than the
Slippery buds unveiling where
All love has wrung itself
From pore the pour against
The door of teeth, the core
Pretends at cooling, but melts
Before the lips and celebrates
Such food that is ourselves.
FALLING INTO THE FIELD OF TIME
From the edge of the boat
We could see the stars
Reflected in the water. We knew the
Many names of the moon and sang
To the fishes there below, the ones
Who swallowed stars and dreamed
The night sky beneath the sea.
The fish beieve we are their rapture
As we sing. We believe the fish
To be gems of priceless value,
Wandering through the mind,
Bearing the names of the seas.
That night we slept on deck
Listening to the wind and waves
Tell stories of fire on
Islands so far away that one
Can but learn their names,
To visit these places is simply
Not possible in a single lifetime.
When dawn came we could no longer
Tell if we were male or female.
Deer gather at our feet. We
Feed them from bowls. We see
Death with its flocks of birds
Wheel and circle overhead.
We decide to make music forever.
We dance and sail on.
HARPS
These harps that collect
In the eddies of lovemaking,
We find them, days later,
Still strung with the silk
Strings that bound us so together.
I carefully lift them from
The stream, thinking they
Have belonged to angels.
They are hung with wet and
The sweet smell of childhood,
Bright with wagons and the
Ghosts of dogs basking near
The door yeard.
They shine so, it is hard
To believe they were once
Ourselves and we played upon them,
Full and drenced in passion,
Smiles, music on our lips.
I reach to touch the part
That makes the music and all
Is water once again, a riffle,
Then a rapid, then a tumbling.
Over and over again until the
Room is great with longing,
The river spreading itself
Before me llike a song.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
A couple of poems and some Wyeth paintings and one other




WALKING ALONG THE ROAD WE STOP NEAR A STREAM IN SPRINGTIME
You have found bits of song caught
In the spillway of a beaver dam. They
Are church-like in their praising. They shake
The collection of sticks
Piercing the face of the dam like so many
Bayonets. A rain begins and spills
Upon the surface of the pool, each drop a book,
A crowd, a child, a Golden Heart siging to the fools,
To what is left of the dancers, the poor shoulders
Of the river made to bear a cascade of tears.
They have built a monument on the edge
Of a cliff. It is impossible to get close enough
To look at it without plunging into the mind of God.
We stand watching the little fires in its towers,
The pitiful way it seems to contemplate the end
Of day. A vibrant eye peers from every window,
Some of them weep as only ones who have seen murder
Can weep. Ships send up flares to illuminate this place.
We walk along the edge of the pond where the grass
Grows tall and yellow. We stop and kiss each other
Before deciding to lie in this place and create
Another world, full of wings and the silence invented by snow.
We are unquenchable as acrobats before the highest throne.
House, knife, wonder, tears, cold, a flute,
Lambs, bridges, hills, the beautiful dark,
Silver bells opening like journeys, a crying,
Weaving a web around the heart that it may
Not break. All of the heavens resting
In the corners of your smile.
ONE HUNDRED POEMS
The way light eats the horizon.
The way Japanese ghosts
Have no feet. Birds gather
In the trees. They say things
To each other that we can hear
But are unable to understand.
A glass reflects the rising
Of the moon. Reading secret
Messages in the pattern of leaves
Upon the ground. There were
Pieces of conversation stuck to
His teeth. A great cultus of
Admonition flourished around
Any mention of the present tense.
The rafters were draped
With banners showing the most
Intimate secrets of the verb.
Landscape is spoken of only
In regard to feelings. There is
No middle distance. It becomes
Inevitable that dense conversation
Cover the face of the moon,
That night untie itself
From any reason and reduce
All poetry to whispers which
Remind one of the wind.
One hundred poems are written
At exactly the same moment.
They are mistaken for oceans,
And fished and thought of great
Depth. One crosses them
Full of wonder, lingering as long
As possible to watch
The waves, the shadow
Flight of birds across
Their sweet surface.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Friday, August 20, 2010
Blowing up Table Rock at Niagara Falls. It was too dangerous. People might be killed. It might collapse.



DAYS WITHOUT YOU
Before you even feel it.
Before you see the burns.
Before the serious night enters
And hides in the corner of the room
Waiting.
Before the question start.
Before the walls turn red.
Before the dreams come
Carrying their cloth bags, damp
With slender breathing.
Before these things,
All language will stop.
I will hold you
With my eyes, as if
All other instruments
Were broken and we
Had nO right to come here.
The thickness of our bodies
Shall be of great comfort
Then. The heavy verbs
Of our movements shall
Appear as dance.
Then, I will kiss you
With my lips full upon
All that is your reason.
And we will be transported
Together. And they who chance to see
These things will be unable to remember
Our names or if we stood
Before them. for them,
And their time, we shall
Have only this recognition : love.
WHAT DO WE WATCH
The mouth opens, unaccustomed
To the finality of body encountering body
For the purpose of feeding, an expression,
Lip to lip and touching deeper than language
Allows. The fireworks from the edge of the trenches
Says that fulfillment is in sight, a knowing from
One body to another, explained in ripples of orgasm,
Delineating the parameters of the embrace. I embrace
You. To say it in French; my language no longer includes
The mention of your name. You pulse through my nervous
System, lit by the light of your own loins burning brightly against the
electricity of electronic media. What is left to say? I reach
To bring my energy across the air to you. I express myself in
A final emission that sticks to my hands as I rec
NOW I COULDN’T REALLY SAY
Now I couldn’t really say
If it was morning coming
Around the corner with that basket
Of bread in its hands, but
It was smiling and somebody
Was moving little strings
And music was a funny man
With garlic round his throat
And fire in a cup.
This seemed good.
I kept my eye on the top
Of the hill for about an hour.
The sun was a little late, had
A harder time getting ready.
Clouds caught in the trees or bumping
Along the ground, half asleep. Still,
There it was like everyday I had imagined
It. Fat and round and very bright.
It walked on my skin and moved into my eyes
Like it lived there. Some birds flew past,
Either inside me or outside me. It was one
Of the other, but never both. A song was
Starting a little further down the road.
Reason enough to go on.
Go on.