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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
10 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: The Day I Got My Finger Stuck Up My Nose by Brian Patten

From Liverpool poet Brian Patten (b. 1946) I have read several poems about lost or budding love and lost friendship, that I could enjoy for their direct and precise language. Patten has written many poetry books for adults and children during his long career, and is associated with poems like Philip Larkin and Alan Ginsburg. I …

anthology, Brian Patten 1 Comment
9 March, 2018
Poetry
On my way home

I walk rather straight to the subway station an old hooker says fuck fuck fuck let’s go fuck it is the umpteenth century there are those days that I just want to lie in the grass there are those that I want to answer my call unambiguous days, blushing in abundant sunlight days I talk …

days, hooker, life 1 Comment
8 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: A Spring Song by Donald Davie

Donald Davie (1922-1995) was a rather philosophical poet and scholar. His decisively English style is strong and confident and has been likened to Larkin and Hughes. I read ‘A spring song’: “stooped to truth and moralized his song” Spring pricks a little. I get out the maps. Time to demoralize my song, high time. Vernal …

7 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Conscientious Objector by Edna St. Vincent Millay

Today I read Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950). She was an important American poet was an eccentric, humorous and politically outspoken figure. She was called the ‘Herald of the New Woman’ by her biographer. She was a skillful writer of sonnets, and, like her contemporary Robert Frost, combined modernist attitude with traditional forms. We read …

anthology, death, Edna St Vincent Millay 1 Comment
6 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Young Poets by Nicanor Parra

Chilean poet Nicanor Parra (1914 – 2018) was also a mathematician, physicist and cosmologist and an important figure in Latin American poetry who won the Cervantes prize. His Poemas y Antipoemas is a classic of Latin American literature. I read ‘Young poets’ in a translation by Miller Williams: Young Poets Write as you will In whatever style you …

1 Comment
5 March, 2018
Laughs
Reading: White Comedy by Benjamin Zephaniah

Benjamin Zephaniah (b. 1958) is a British-Jamaican poet who has considerable influence in contemporary poetry. He was born in Birmingham to a Barbadian father and Jamaican mother. As a child, he developed dyslexia and was imprisoned for burglary. He is also the author of novels for teenagers and a notable animal rights activist. He refused …

anthology, Benjamin Zephaniah, Jamaica, racism, rasta 1 Comment
4 March, 2018
Philosophy
Ethics and Artificial Intelligence

Without further ado, let’s assume the AI has all information available and imagine a debate with the world’s foremost human intellectual. The AI will have a flawless argument that takes into account all the information in a superhuman fashion a human intellectual can never attain. Its rational reasoning is far superior. Recall the 2016 victory …

1 Comment
3 March, 2018
Poetry
All is mathematics

The wind is mathematics,
and your tear ducts
me insisting we continue,
the curvature of your smile

the rock you sat down on,
the ocean that sighed in your stead

the proof that life is a theorem,
which can never be proven to be one

love, mathematics 1 Comment
2 March, 2018
Laughs
Aristotle and death

Death is the end, yet not the purpose of life, Aristotle said.
But when you die it has to be done right the first time.
The way you die will say a lot about your life.
But doing something right implies purpose.
What did Aristotle say about this?

Aristotle, death 1 Comment
1 March, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Fog by Amy Clampitt

Amy Clampitt (1920-1994) from Iowa wrote most of her poetry when she was over sixty. I found a poem entitled ‘fog’ that I like because of its precise description: Fog A vagueness comes over everything, as though proving color and contour alike dispensable: the lighthouse extinct, the islands’ spruce-tips drunk up like milk in the …

Amy Clampitt, anthology, fog, visual 1 Comment
28 February, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Because You Asked Me About The Line Between Prose And Poetry by Howard Nemerov

Howard Nemerov (1920-1991) was a versatile American poet, known for his refined formalism (he wrote often anthologized sonnets like ‘A primer of the daily round’, as well as his wit. Here is a fine short poem about the reversibility of time: Because you asked me about the line between prose and poetry Sparrows were feeding in a …

anthology, Nemerov, poetry, prose
27 February, 2018
Poetry

Oh, you want praise and recognition and above all money. But if that was your true motive, you would have done something else. All this fame and honor is a very nice thing, as long as you don’t believe it. – Howard Nemerov

26 February, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Jane by Howard Moss

American poet, dramatist and critic Howard Moss (1922-1987) won the National Book Award in 1972 for his selected poetry. He was the poetry editor of the New Yorker for almost forty years and a great discoverer of poets. Moss also wrote a funny illustrated book of writer’s parodies called ‘instant lives’. I read ‘Jane’, a poem …

anthology, Howard Moss, love 1 Comment
25 February, 2018
Laughs

porn is the betrayed idyll
that came looking for itself

porn
24 February, 2018
Activism
Donald Trump as seen by a 5 year old
Trump
24 February, 2018
Laughs
I fell in love three times

A few months ago, in a period of soul-searching that can happen to the best of us, I fell in love three times. I try to be a faithful poetic observer and report to you how exactly that happened. My first amorous encounter was with Cuban superstar Camilla Cabelo, chiefly because of her aphrodisiacal voice …

1 Comment
23 February, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Another Species by Peter Kane Dufault

American poet Peter Kane Dufault (1923 – 2013) was also a tree surgeon, pollster, fiddler and banjo-player. His writing career spans nearly sixty years. Here a simple poem about species extinction, because it is a topic I am upset about: Another Species Kestrel too? Dwindling now? That small falcon somehow quarried out of a rainbow …

anthology, kestrel, nature, Peter Kane Dufault 1 Comment
23 February, 2018
Miru
What is context?

I asked Miru what 배 ‘bae’ and 눈 ‘nun’ means. She says ‘pear’ and ‘snow’. But in Korean, bae also means boat and nun also means eye. I tell her that it depends on the context. Context is the concept I want to explain to her today. “Papa what is that, context?” -“Context is a …

concept, context, education, language, Miru 1 Comment
22 February, 2018
The good life
Simple focus exercise

Type one thing and say something else. For example, type the word ‘blue’ while you say ‘red’. You can almost feel how your brain is creating new neuronal connections when you do this.

1 Comment
21 February, 2018
Philosophy
A Meditation on power

Find a comfortable place to sit. Be aware of your posture. Is your back straight, are your knees below your waist? Breathe in calmly and deeply. Focus on the phenomenon of power. When have you experienced power over another living being or another living being exercising power over you? How did it feel? Is the …

20 February, 2018
Poetry
Reading: The Ghost In The Martini by Antony Evan Hecht

Anthony Evan Hecht (1923-2004) was born in New York. His parents hated his ambition to become a poet. He fought in WW II and was traumatized by te horrific accounts of the French prisoners of Flossenburg, the concentration camp his division liberated, leading to a nervous breakdown in 1959. I read soemthing light today, it’s …

anthology, Anthony Hecht, Martini, mind
19 February, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Morning Song by Sylvia Plath

The poetry of Sylvia Plath (1932-1963) never fails to impress. Lazarus and Daddy are household names in poetics, and the entire book Ariel counts as a masterpiece. You can find plenty of wonderful writing on Plath on sites like the Academy of American Poets. Here I read ‘Morning song’ and, as usual, give an interpretation …

anthology, Ariel, Lazarus, morning song, motherhood, Sylvia Plath 1 Comment
18 February, 2018
Poetry
Reading: Mother by L.E. Sissman

L.E. Sissman (1928-1976) was a child prodigy who won the National Spelling Bee. He had a typical American middle class career in a time when that was still possible, but he also had the calling of a poet. He was diagnosed with Hodgkins’ disease in the late sixties, which inspired him to write prolifically: I. …

anthology, death, L.E. Sissman, mother
17 February, 2018
Poetry
Reading: The Evening Of The Mind by Donald Justice

Donald Justice (1925-2004) was a quietly influential poet from Iowa with a sharp and versatile mind. He wrote free form poetry as well as sonnets, sestinas and villanelles. His Selected Poems won the 1979 Pulitzer Prize. Here is The evening of the mind: The evening of the mind Now comes the evening of the mind. Here …

American, anthology, Donald Justice, mind

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