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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
15 December, 2017
Poetry
Death is not my friend

your grave is paid until the end of the decade when a yellow bulldozer comes rolling on the churchyard gravel somebody is paid to do this, paid. it won’t take long, they are discreet your stone becomes the pavement on which children meet or some guy commits a heinous crime and your memory is strung …

death, grave 1 Comment
15 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Skylab by Rolf Jacobsen

Norwegian poet Rolf Jacobsen (1907-1994) was a member of the Norwegian national socialist party. What? After the war he was convicted to three and a half years of hard labor. What an asshole! Now, let’s look at a poem of his. Could a nazi even feel the same way we do? Skylab We’ve come so …

anthology, astronaut, Norway, Rolf Jacobsen
14 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: No One, Everyone by Bronisław Maj

Polish poet Bronisław Maj (b. 1953) is celebrated as one of the finest poets of his generation and recepient of some reputable literary prizes (almost no author biography on the Internet fails to mention the Prizes). I found a short verse in a translation by Katarzyna Kietlinska and David Malcolm: No one, everyone No one …

anthology, Bronislaw Maj, city, words 1 Comment
13 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Vacation by William Stafford

William Stafford (1914-1993) was a very prolific American writer who was born in Kansas and died in Oregon. From his many works I selected, with the help of Szeslaw Milosz, a short observation about traveling: Vacation One scene as I bow to pour her coffee:– ____Three Indians in the scouring drouth ____huddle at the grave scooped in …

anthology, funeral, train, William Stafford 1 Comment
12 December, 2017
Laughs

A poet is a lazy philosopher – K. Choi, lazy poet

Philosophy, poetry
12 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: This Is Just To Say by William Carlos Williams

Something light and exhilarating today. William Carlos Williams (1883-1963) was a New York poet important voice of modernism and symbolism, who was celebrated by Ginsberg and the Beats for his accessibility. For our growing anthology, I read what is probably the most famous post-it note of American culture: This is just to say I have …

anthology, love, William Carlos Williams
11 December, 2017
Poetry
Tableau I

, in which we are all gummy bears
competing with each other
on the birthday table of a child

who has yet to be diagnosed colorblind

death, gummy bear, religion 1 Comment
11 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Winged And Acid Dark by Robert Hass

Robert Hass (b. 1941) is another famous American poet who served as Poet Laureate of that immense country and won a Pulitzer prize. I read one of his poems today that I think is representative. In other words: vintage Hass: Winged and acid dark A sentence with “dappled shadow” in it. Something not sayable spurting …

anthology, language, Robert Hass, war 1 Comment
10 December, 2017
Uncategorized
Icecream

in my country, everybody can eat icecream with wholeness in it world leaders rub nuclear shoulders for it, spiders feel secure in their web with some fly carcasses but it is warming everywhere and I am afraid of the others who restrict everything what if I want to dance on harvest day? what if I …

1 Comment
9 December, 2017
Laughs
Math

Dear Miru, Your calculating is improving and you actually like it. We play with numbers together. Two times ten is twenty. Six plus five is eleven. Ten minus 2 equals eight. It is all very playful. You learn how to figure out calculations by making drawings of dots, lines, squares on the whiteboard. You don’t …

calculating, math, Miru 1 Comment
9 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Anthem for doomed youth by Wilfred Owen

English war poetry from the trenches. After Sassoon I read a poem from the pen of remarkable Wilfred Owen (1893-1918), one great poor soul from the culled generation of World War I: Anthem for doomed youth What passing-bells for these who die as cattle? ____Only the monstrous anger of the guns. ____Only the stuttering rifles’ …

anthology, Sassoon, trenches, war, Wilfred Owen
8 December, 2017
Laughs
Reading: Résumé by Dorothy Parker

Dorothy Parker (1893-1967) has lead a tempestuous life with several marriages, some suicides attempt and employment by Vanity Fair. One of her collections is called ‘enough rope’ and I can’t supress a sinister feeling. However, she stayed alive and became a productive screenwriter and poet. I sample a very short piece here, because short verse …

anthology, Dorothy Parker, suicide
7 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Taking off Emily Dickinson’s clothes by Billy Collins

Billy Collins (b. 1941) is ‘the most popular poet of America’ according to some. He was poet laureate of the US several times and won a prize or something for the America’s funniest home poetry – he manages to tell a good joke without destroying the poetic wager. I fell in love with this poet, …

America, anthology, Billy Collins, Emily Dickinson 1 Comment
6 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: A motel in the hotel of time by Dale Houstman

Dale Houstman is an extraordinary poet from America and I am his friend on the Internet. Today, I want to read a poem from his collection ‘A dangerous vacation’. There is a lot of extraordinary stuff but I stick to a not so long poem that has an enigmatic metaphor as a title: A motel …

anthology, Dale Houstman, time 1 Comment
5 December, 2017
Miru
Be Farecul When You Ross The Croad

You learn very fast now. Lately, we have been playing “lettertjes omdraaien”, exchange letters in words. Even though you don’t really get the concept of spelling yet and how several letters make up a word (it is interesting that this mental apparatus is apparently rather complicated; letters are an abstraction, the unit of our language …

game, language, letter jumble
5 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: After Love by Sara Teasdale

Today I discover a short gem written by Sara Teasdale (1884-1933), who wrote a lot of love poetry and committed suicide at the age of 48. I came across this timeless poem about passion:

anthology, love, passion, Sara Teasdale 1 Comment
4 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: My Madonna by Robert W. Service

Robert W. Service (1874-1958) was known as the bard of Yukon, because a lot of his poetry was inspired by his time as a cowboy in Canada. He is also a war poet, having been a reporter of the Balkan war of 1912-13 and an ambulance driver during World War One. I read a funny …

anthology, Canada, Madonna, portrait, Robert Service, Yukon 1 Comment
3 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: The Reckoning by Theodore Roethke

Theodore Roethke (1908-1963), a sickly boy who transformed into a bear of a man with father issues, was according to many critics the greatest of the American poets. While browsing a collection of his poetry on the Internet, I stumbled upon a poem about reckoning. I understand from his biography that he sought for redemption …

anthology, capitalism, Money, poverty, Theodore Roethke 1 Comment
2 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Sad steps by Philip Larkin

I browsed a digital collection of Larkin (1922-1985) to get an idea of his poetry. Returning appears to be the theme of aging, or in the words of this biography, “A sense that life is a finite prelude to oblivion underlies many of Larkin’s poems”. The man himself said “Deprivation is for me what daffodils …

aging, anthology, love, Philip Larkin 1 Comment
1 December, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Attack by Siegfried Sassoon

Famed British war poet Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967) from a family that was called the “Rothschilds of the east”, wrote acclaimd poetry about the trenches of the first world war, so we put the fellow in our anthology. Later in life, he converted to catholicism, a mental swift that also produced some poetic residu, albeit not …

anthology, attack, first world war, Siegfried Sassoon, trenches
30 November, 2017
Miru
Learning: Definition game

Dear Miru, I taught you definitions and how to describe something without using the word for it. It is a game now, but later you’ll understand why that is useful. You are good at it. I asked you to describe an ice-cream and you said a thing that children eat by licking and that is …

definition, learning
30 November, 2017
Philosophy

The English language is nobody’s special property. It is the property of the imagination: it is the property of the language itself. – Derek Walcott

Derek Walcott, English, language
30 November, 2017
Poetry
Reading: Stagnant water by Wen Yiduo

Chinese poet Wen Yiduo (1899-1946) was assassinated by the Kuomintang. According to many, he was an important figure in Chinese intellectual life. He “Wen never resolved the conflicts that existed within him: The elitist and the proletarian, the scholar and the activist, the traditionalist and the innovator, the personal man and the public man, fought …

anthology, death, water, Wen Yiduo
29 November, 2017
Poetry
Reading: La fausse morte by Paul Valéry

Paul Valéry (1971-1945) I found a short poem in a remarkable translation by Nathaniel Rudavsky-Brody: The Faux Death Humble, tender, against the charming tomb, ______Unfeeling monument That out of shadows, leavings, offered love ______Conjures your weary grace, I fall, dying against you, dying — Yet, No sooner fallen across the low grave Whose lawn littered …

anthology, death, love, Paul Valéry 1 Comment

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