Sunday, February 29, 2004
Saturday, February 28, 2004
Gunnar Ekelof
Elegy
by Gunnar Ekelof
from Songs of Something Else
trans. by Leonard Nathan and James Larson
I turned away and everything was changed
The spring thrust out its bird's view eye
From the misty sun straight lines ran to all things
Over the monotonous spans of the telephone wires
clouds loomed like a fire at sea...
Waves
Waves my sisters for whom do you weep
the young god of evening or the shepherd of pain
I write distracted by thought, perhaps I don't remember it
any more
but I believe he was blind
What did he whisper in his sleep under the white membrane
Who really knows, but it seemed to make an impression
on nature
Great tears hung in the trees
and the clouds lolled weeping along the horizons
I write distracted by thought, perhaps I don't remember it
any more
but I believe he was dead
What was it he saw under the dark membrane
Who knows, who knows, but the stones turned themselves in sleep
A temblor shook all the mountains and the sun
turned away
and the sea became bitter
it happened long ago
I don't really know what happened
I remember it only in my feelings
Perhaps it was something else
Perhaps it could have been said in other words
as always everywhere and nowhere
Waves
Waves which hide his traces or hers
all that is written in water and sand
Friday, February 27, 2004
Biographical Note (as promised)
Here in California people confuse the two countries. I have published several books, the covers of which are visible on my home page, along with some sample poems. I am currently at work on a manuscript called The Picky Hound.
My affinity for the Umbrists stems from my reading aesthetic being broader than my writing aesthetic. This is typical, I think.
Since CP Galom has seen it fit to describe his living arrangements, I will provide mine, by way of conclusion. I live in a guest house, behind the mansion of a fairly successful Hollywood actor, a distant cousin, who feels he is "giving back to art" (his words!) by supporting my residency here in the sun. I would like to say that I drive his Ferrari around and investigate crimes, but no one is that lucky in real life. Also, the "criminal element" is not conducive to my work. I share a Prius with Asulcena, my cousin's housekeeper.
A Found Poem from Any Pond
ALARM
Zounds! not a soul Will pass, and do obeisance to the cap.
Zounds, brother, you are mad, I think!
Zounds! I bleed still; I am hurt to the death.
Why, zounds! I am surprized myself.
Zounds! consort!
Zounds! an I were now by this rascal, I could brain him with his lady's fan.
Zounds! how has he the leisure to be sick In such a justling time?
Zounds, sir! then I insist on your quitting the room directly.
Zounds! will they not rob us?
Zounds! they’ll bring the whole country down upon them.
Zounds! madam, you had no taste when you married me!
Zounds and d—nation!
Zounds! he dies: I had forgot the reward.
Zounds! I will speak of him; and let my soul want mercy if I do not join with him.
Zounds! ye fat paunch, an ye call me coward, I’ll stab thee.
Zounds! he’ll drive me distracted, if I contain myself any longer.
Zounds, fellow, cease your deafning cheers!
Zounds! there's no bearing this; it's worse than death!
Thursday, February 26, 2004
Thank you for your comments on Lyceum in Ruins. I don't know when another poem will come, especially in the current climate.
Wednesday, February 25, 2004
You're Watership Down!
by Richard Adams
Though many think of you as a bit young, even childish, you're
actually incredibly deep and complex. You show people the need to rethink their
assumptions, and confront them on everything from how they think to where they
build their houses. You might be one of the greatest people of all time. You'd
be recognized as such if you weren't always talking about talking rabbits.
Take the Book Quiz
at the Blue Pyramid.
Tuesday, February 24, 2004
If you are titillated by the torrent of discussion here at Gunther's Block, prepare yourself for a deluge of Umbrist poetics at Crony.
Sunday, February 22, 2004
LYCEUM IN RUINS
"A sense of doom informs the lynx."
Weeds, schist, an Artesian well:
élan in "a heavenly forge."
Turn back.
There is a human hand here
below the crumbling parapet.
Step on.
A floe (with seniors) leads to the cairn,
to the sniffling goat.
Collapse.
The crotch of time, a bridge
between catapults.
Collapse.
My reliquary brims over:
laurels in agar, a bag of drowned targets.