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Africa anthology Asia Berlin Cambodia capitalism Cartagena Charity Travel children Consumerism death Delhi education essay freedom hitchhiking India Kenya Kisumu language Laos life love Malaysia meaning meditation memory Miru Money music Nairobi pain Philosophy poetry power refugees religion resistance Thailand time Tiruvannamalai Trump Vientiane Vietnam writing
2 April, 2018
Poetry
Time with my daughter

I pressed her baby toes against my lips it was the same time as the ultrasound now, is the time that I can’t tie her hair before she goes to kindergarten now, is the time I climb a mountain with her and teach her how to swim now, is the time a woman will smile …

Miru, nostalgia, time
1 April, 2018
Poetry
Kronos

I love my best of you
shine me
through the vestiges of your spring
make me, who has
the wind still in his wrinkles,
sing of how we love the silk softness
of our whiten hair,
chance with me the rite of our fingers through it,
entomb us in that raging, mad,
that sacred dance

Kronos, old age, time
31 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Ode To The Walking Woman by Tishani Doshi

Tishani Doshi (b. 1975) is an Indian writer, dancer and journalist. I read a lyrical song inspired by a statue by Alberto Giacometti. Ode to the walking woman (After Alberto Giacometti ) Sit – you must be tired of walking, of losing yourself this way: a bronzed rib of exhaustion thinned out against the dark. …

anthology, Tishani Doshi, woman 1 Comment
30 March, 2018
Poetry

“I have made a tribe of my affections, and my tribe is scattered” – Stanley Kunitz

Stanley Kunitz
29 March, 2018
Philosophy

“Attention is the natural prayer of the soul.” – Malebranche

attention, Malebranche
28 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: In Memoriam Paul Celan by Edward Hirsch

Edward Hirsch (b. 1950) is an American poet who can emulate many different voices. He was a poetry columnist for the Washington Post. He lives and Brooklyn and he has lost a son, about which he wrote an acclaimed book of poetry, called ‘Gabriel’. I read an In Memoriam for Celan: In Memoriam Paul Celan …

anthology, Edward Hirsch, in memoriam, Paul Celan 1 Comment
27 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: When A Woman Loves A Man by David Lehman

David Lehman (b. 1948) is a US poet, editor, critic. He teaches at The New School in New York City. Here you can find some biography. I read some stuff about relationships: When A Woman Loves A Man When she says Margarita she means Daiquiri. When she says quixotic she means mercurial. And when she …

anthology, David Lehman, relationship, woman 1 Comment
26 March, 2018
Poetry
Instagram poetry

Giving in to the social media requirement of visuality and brevity, I also publish poetry on – Instagram. There are a lot of so called “instapoets” but in my humble opinion they are not exactly innovative and their language sounds pretty dull to me. As it happens – and this doesn’t contradict my modesty – my …

instagram, instapoet, poetry, poetsofinstagram 1 Comment
25 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Buddhist Barbie by Denise Duhamel

Denise Duhamel (b. 1961) is a poet from Rhode Island who experiments with form and subject, and engages in pop culture. Influences are Dylan Thomas and Kathleen Spivack. Today, I read a short and funny observation: Buddhist Barbie In the 5th century B.C. an Indian philosopher Gautama teaches ‘All is emptiness’ and ‘There is no …

anthology, Barbie, Buddhism, Denise Duhamel 1 Comment
24 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: The Woods At Night by May Swenson

Anna Thilda May, “May” Swenson (1913-1989) was an American poet and playright, and a very important one with a prolific career. A critic notes that in her poetry, “the sheer thingness of things is joyfully celebrated.” She is particularly celebrated for her nature poetry. I read a haunting verse about birds: The Woods At Night The …

anthology, May Swenson, night
23 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Words by Dana Gioia

Dana Gioia (b. 1950) is an American poet and writer. I found her theoretical poem about Words for a friend with whom I have an ongoing conversation about language and the other of language. Words The world does not need words. It articulates itself in sunlight, leaves, and shadows. The stones on the path are no less …

anthology, Dana Gioia, words 1 Comment
22 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Personal Letter No. 3 by Sonia Sanchez

Sonia Sanchez (b. 1934) is a prolific African American author of twelve poetry books and lots of other stuff. Associated with the Black Arts Movement. I read a short meditation on life and love because I feel like that today: Personal Letter No. 3 nothing will keep us young you know not young men or …

anthology, Sonia Sanchez 1 Comment
21 March, 2018
Poetry
Don Neon

Don Neon made the best letters in town New businesses came and went, and came again and the comings always involved Don Neon You paid per letter so the town was full of short names: Tom’s Tea, Bob’s Bowl, Fred’s Fork They were proper names and the town shone. Today, I saw all his signs …

letters, neonlight, signs 1 Comment
20 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Flower by Paul Celan

Paul Celan (1920-1970) is of course the best German poet who has ever lived. I don’t read the canonical ‘Todesfuge’ here, you can find excellent analysis on the Internet. I have read a poem about an axe that flowered, but here I stick with a modest poem called “Flower” in translation, that still has all …

anthology, flower, Paul Celan 1 Comment
19 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Homage To My Hips by Lucille Clifton

Lucile Clifton (1936-2010) was poet laureate of Maryland from 1979-1985. She was a prolific and widely respected author. Her writing style is sober and she was mainly concerned with the African American experience. Two of her works were simultaneously nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. I read a poem that I, if you allow me, find hip: Homage …

anthology, Lucille Clifton 1 Comment
18 March, 2018
Philosophy

Death is a displaced name for a linguistic predicament. – Paul de Man

1 Comment
17 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Vulture by Robinson Jeffers

Robinson Jeffers (1887-1962) wrote narrative poetry about the Californian coast. He was an icon of the environmental movement who loved nature more than man, influenced by Whitman and Wordsworth. He even called his ideas ‘inhumanism’ because he desired to change the focus from man to not man. Poets like Robert Hass , William Everson or …

anthology, death, Environment, Robinson Jeffers, vulture 1 Comment
16 March, 2018
Poetry
Piano Concerto

Today I felt something again.
It has been a while.
I felt something while listening to music:
Elation, Otherworldliness. Fate.

concerto, piano 1 Comment
15 March, 2018
The good life

From quiet homes and first beginning, out to the undiscovered ends, there’s nothing worth the wear of winning, but laughter and the love of friends. – Hilaire Belloc

Hillaire Belloc
14 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: In The Summer by Nizar Qabbani

Nizar Qabbani (1923-1998) was a Syrian diplomat, poet and publisher. His poetic style combines simplicity and elegance in exploring themes of love, eroticism, feminism, religion, and Arab nationalism (Wikipedia). I read a simple love poem, translated by B. Frangieh And C. Brown, that sounds unmistakenly Arabic: In the summer In the summer I stretch out on the …

anthology, love, Qabbani, sea 1 Comment
14 March, 2018
The good life

“It would not be much of a universe if it wasn’t home to the people you love.”
Stephen Hawking, 1942-2018

Hawking
13 March, 2018
Poetry
Absolution

Zeus,
I tithe:
your might,
delivers me,
timely,
to the light.

Zeus 1 Comment
12 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Tarantella by Hillaire Belloc

Hillaire Belloc (1870-1953) was a prolific Anglo-French poet and historian who was considered one of the four great British writers of the Edwardian age, along with Chesterton, Shaw and H.G. Wells. “Among his best-remembered poems are Jim, who ran away from his nurse, and was eaten by a lion and Matilda, who told lies and was …

anthology, Hillaire Belloc, rhythm 1 Comment
11 March, 2018
Poetry
listen to Bach (and die)

there is no landscape but
a row of black I totem poles
absolution dogs us in complex fugues
played on a mole’s sleeping belly
mad frogs wearing unreliable diapers
augur a couple more dimensions
in which we thrive like ferns in giant forests
(we eat the lumens)
and keep patenting that impossible is nothing

Bach, impossible 1 Comment

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