Apr 12
Breakfast, by Mary Lamb (1764-1847) A dinner party, coffee, tea, Sandwich, or supper, all may be In their way pleasant. But to me Not one of these deserves the praise That welcomer of new-born days, A breakfast, merits; ever giving Cheerful notice we are living Another day refreshed by sleep, When its festival we keep. […]
Apr 11
So Simple. So Unexpected, by Eileen Hennessy Practical, impeccably polite, glowing with righteousness and the importance of my town of clotheslines and light poles and propane tanks, our well-tempered river lounging in its luscious bed of weeds, the railroad running past my one-way life, I lived to the complicated rhythms of my days, the […]
Apr 10
Sunbeams, by Avner Treinin (also transliterated Tranin, 1928-2011) Do not allow the sun to dim. Out of paper, friendship, smiles, Cut many suns As one cuts cookies with the glass’s rim. Let it be round, Rays extending from it (They’ll say: make believe!) Two lines like two hands, Outspread with a fistful of seds, […]
Apr 09
Living Here Now, by Eloise Klein Healy (1943-) My father’s dying resembles nothing so much as a small village building itself in the mind of a traveler who reads about it and thinks to go there. The journey is imagined in a way not even felt as when years ago I knew my father […]
Apr 08
Two Women Drinking Coffee, by Laila Halaby They sit in jeans and drink their coffee, black As kohl on their eyes. They pour their tales Of broken romance through a sieve: the words, While cardamom in flavor, are in English. Today they’ve met outside of a cafe; Their work is done and each is going […]
Apr 07
Three Birds, by Matthew Brenneman (1960-) 1. ALBATROSS A thousand miles of gale-lashed sea Is nothing to this winged mariner. Of all the birds, he would prefer This emptiness to earth’s solidity, The gray abstraction of the waves Rolling beneath great tapered wings, whose span Would dwarf the stature of a man And lightly glide […]
Apr 06
The Old Man On The Shore, by Nazim Hikmet (1902-1963) deep mountains lined up in rows the pine forest reached to the sea on the shore an old man lay stretched out on the pebble beach and this sun-ripe September day the distant news of sunken ships the cool blue of the northeast breeze […]
Apr 05
The New Experience, by Suzanne Buffam (1972-) I was ready for a new experience. All the old ones had burned out. They lay in little ashy heaps along the roadside And blew in drifts across the fairgrounds and fields. From a distance some appeared to be smoldering But when I approached with my hat in […]
Apr 04
The Parakeets, by Alberto Blanco (1951-) They talk all day and when it starts to get dark they lower their voices to converse with their own shadows and with the silence. They are like everybody —the parakeets— all day chatter, and at night bad dreams. With their gold rings on their clever faces, brilliant feathers […]
Apr 03
Poetry II, by Andre Chedid (1920-2011) What is more than the word but delivered by the word What dies but rises again What always surrenders but is reborn What grows beyond us but is rooted in us What we call life but the days destroy What is obvious but remains […]