It's by Marianne Moore and conveys her father's philosophy toward visitors to his home. Short--reading and video:
Wednesday, July 6, 2022
Garbage Mountain
A man drives a long yellow tractor
across a mountain of garbage,
kneading the sickly sweet heap
all day. White gulls fall upon the feast
in shifts. What things have shown
themselves from the churning dream
& surprised the driver over the years
of riding the groaning diesel dinosaur?
Since we throw everything away,
anything could be inside
the writhing, slippery loaf
that cooks in sun heat and cools
in rain. Anything.
Tuesday, July 5, 2022
A Fine Poem by James Wright
A short mystical poem by James Wright (1927-1980). One of those poems just to enjoy without pressing too hard for an explication. Text from allpoetry.com. Short video + reading:
Thursday, June 30, 2022
"You're in Wichita (And I Am Not),"
I always wanted to write an old-fashioned "country" song with spare lyrics, so I gave it a go and came up with "You're in Wichita (And I Am Not)." with assistance from Roger Illsley, who wrote some music for it and performed and recorded it for Youtube:
Wednesday, June 29, 2022
The Genre of Sad Erotica
too young or too middling. They touch
their bodies like they handle a heap of laundry.
They're hungry but too tired from work
to cook. Could be no one's there
to cook for them. Or someone's there
but mutual indifference grinds
the ambience like a glacier.
Oh, a bath would feel great but only after
booze or weed. Food delivered?
Microwave launched, cans slashed open?
Leftovers devoured like a dog's breakfast?
They sleep in front of a screen and wake
up confused, then vacant. So where's the
erotica? Well, maybe as bath or shower
stimulates flab and muscle, they think about
sex! They think about what sex might
bring. Oblivion of lust, the feeling
of being someone (well, something,
anyway) someone wants to touch. Alas,
in sad erotica, grotesquely realistic,
people get out of the shower and dry
themselves and put on cotton, linen,
or wool. Likely worn several nights
in a row. They walk slowly to a bed
or couch and fall, exhaling like beasts.
In sleep, maybe dreams of purple
romance, sizzling mystery, and molten
sex will riot. Finally, some action.
Saturday, June 25, 2022
Giving Blood
The opaque bag darkens shadow-red
with my corpuscular tithing. Blood's
darkness always surprises me, suggests how
blood wells up from mineral earth like lava.
The blood-room’s hushed, as if we lying
on padded tables were sacrificial goats
with slit throats and the strong nurses, priests.
A tall woman or short man who used to be
a baby will stroll in flowered Paris one
day, pulsing traces of my blood, which
is O-Negative and CMV-Negative. My heart
never thought to teach me what these words
and letters mean. Do vampires carry all
types of blood, and is that why they’re
so pale and mean and unproductive?
I mean, get out of the casket, Drac,
go to bloodoholic rehab, give back to
the community. Just don’t donate blood,
and stay the hell away from babies...
Finished, I'm offered a cookie and juice.
Friday, June 24, 2022
"Hallelujah, Gloria," music video
A glum day for multiple reasons. So I decided to make a lowest budget music video of a song that Roger Illsley (music) and I (lyrics) wrote that Roger recorded. We hope it's smile-worthy. Well, here it is:
Thursday, June 23, 2022
"In 1940," by Anna Akhmatova
The Penguin Selected Poems of hers, translated by D.M. Thomas, is a great intro to her poetry in English. Somehow she survived WW2 and Stalin's terror--many of her compatriots did not. The Akhmatova House in St. Petersburg, Russia, is now a museum. And there is a Joseph Brodsky room near the entry. You go through a small tunnel just off the street to get to the house, and the walls are covered with poetry graffiti. It's as if everyone has agreed to put only poetry graffiti up there; pretty cool.
A reading of a short portion of "In 1940", with short video:
Sunday, June 19, 2022
Ragusa, Sicily: Festival Blues
"Memory of My Father," by Patrick Kavanagh
Reading/video of a short poem by Patrick Kavanagh (1904-1967), well known Irish poet and novelist:
Saturday, June 18, 2022
Closing Time
Tonight my cabaret of fears
glowed and hummed.
A band played anxiety
in sharp keys. We asked
the bartender to remove
his Death costume and put
away the scythe. Insulted,
he yelled, “Drink up, last call!”
A good time was not had by all.
hans ostrom 2022
Sunday, June 12, 2022
Treasure Enough
slices of yellow peach
with a few blueberries
in a bowl. some water
and homemade bread.
outside, birds make
raucous noise, manic
after rain-showers. all
this is treasure enough.
hans ostrom 2022
Monday, June 6, 2022
William Butler Yeats goes full gothic!
I hadn't read this poem until recently. A vampire poem from WBY. Short poem, with reading and video: