chris murray's *Texfiles*

"A note to Pound in heaven: Only one mistake, Ezra! You should have talked to women" --George Oppen, _Twenty Six Fragments_





Archives:





xoxo Hey, E-Mail Me! xoxo







ManY PoETiKaL HaTs LisT:

Holly's Pirate-girl Hat, chrismurray in a straw hat, Michael Helsem's Gray Wyvern NOLA Fedora. Duchamp's Rrose Selavy's flirting hat. Max Ernst's Hats of The Hat Makes the Man. Jordan Davis' The Hat! poetry. hks' smelly head baseball cap. Samuel Beckett's Lucky's Black bowler hat, giving his oration on what's questionable in mankind, in *Waiting for 'God-ot'*. my friend John Phillips's 1969 dove gray fedora w/ wild feather. Bob Dylan's mystery lover's Panama Hat. Bob Creeley's Black Mountain Felt Boater Hat. Duke Ellington's Satin Top Hat. Acorn Hats of Tree. Freud's 1950 City Fedora. Joseph Brodsky's Sailor Cap. Harry K Stammer's Copper Hat Hell. Lewis LaCook's bowler hat(s). Tom Beckett's Bad Hair Day Furry Pimp Hat. Daughter Holly's black beret. harry k stammer's fez. Cat in the Hat's Hat & best hat, Googling Texfiles: crocheted hat with flames. Harry K Stammer's tinseled berets. Tex's 10 gallon Gary Cooper felt Stetson cowboy hat. Jordan Davis's fedora. Dali's High-heel Shoe Hat. Harry K Stammer's en-blog LAPD Hat & aluminum baseball cap. cap'n caps. NY-Yankees caps. the HKS-in-person-caps are blue or green no logos nor captions. Ma Skanky Possum 10's nighttime cap. moose antler hat. propeller beenie hat. doo rag. knit face mask hat. Bob Dylan's & photographer Laziz Hamani's panama hats. Mark Weiss's Publisher's Hat. Rebecca Loudon's Seattle-TX-Hats'n'boots.




Ever-Evolving Links:


Silliman's Links
Dominic Rivron
Unidentified
Br Tom @ One & Plainer
Dan Waber: ars poetica anthology
Dan Waber: altered books anthology
chris daniels: Notes to a Fellow Traveller
Chris Daniels: Toward an Anti-Capitalist Poetry
David Daniels: The Gates Of Paradise
subterranean poets: Beijing Poetry Group
Charles Alexander/Chax Press: Chaxblog
Headlines Poetry: the latest weblog entries
Henry Gould's AlephoeBooks
Julie Choffel's Understory
Tom Murphy's former one
Jean Vengua's New Okir
Roger Pao's Asian-American Poetry
Tom Lisk: Oilcloth and Linoleum
Kevin Doran
Reb Livingston's Cackling Jackal Blog
Janet Holmes: Humanophone
Lorna Dee Cervantes
Mark Young's gamma ways
Brian Campbell: Out of the Woodwork
Shanna's DIY Publishing Blog
Galatea Resurrects: a Poetry Review
Tom Beckett
John Sakkis: BOTH BOTH
New Francois Luong:Voices in Utter Dark, KaBlow!sm is...
Old Francois Luong: Voices in Utter Dark
Margin Walker: Andrew Lundwall
Free Space Comix: the latest BK Stefans blog
Adam Lockhart, Experimentalist Composer
Antic View: Alan Bramhall & Jeff Harrison
lookouchblog: Jessica Smith
MiPOradio
Web Log -- Charles Bernstein
Google Poem Generator: Leevi Lehto
Marie Mutsuki Mockett
Feral Scholar: Stan Goff
worderos: Tom Beckett
In Galatea's Purse
Japundit
Quiet Desperation: Jim Ryal
Luca Antara: Martin Edmond
Brief Epigrams: Ryan Alexander MacDonald
Radio My Vocabulary: 4 pm Sunday Poetry Streams
Mark Lamoreaux: [[[0{:}0]]]
Hot Whiskey Blog
louder
Nick Bruno: They Shoot Poets Don't They?
Joe Massey: Rooted Fool
Kate Greenstreet: every other day
heuriskein: Tom Orange
Chiaroscuro Metropoli: Tom Beckett
Behrle's latest spout!
Fluffy Dollars: Michelle Detorie
Jane Dark's Sugar High!
The Katherine Anne Porter Literary Center
(Charles) Olson Now: Michael Kellaher & Ammiel Alcalay
kari edwards' TranssubMUTATION
Notes on the Revival: Jeremy Hawkins
PurPur: Petrus Pokus
Snapper Missives: Scott Pierce
A Sad Day for Sad Birds II: Gina Meyers
Great Works: Peter Philpot
zafusy: experimental poetry journal
Writeboard: a collaborative writing tool
John Latta: Rue Hazard
KP Harris: Croissant Factory
Stephanie Young's New Site
Stephen Vincent's New Site
Portable Press@Yo~Yo Labs
Square America
Amy King's blog
Robert: Peyoetry Hut
Muisti Kirja: Karri Kokko
Karri Kokko's Blonde on Blonde
Yummeee Blog (recipes)
Nice Guy Syndrome: Tim Botta
Left Hook
Del Ray Cross: anachronizms
Juan Cole: Informed Comment
BuzzFlash - Daily Headlines, Breaking News, Links
Aaron McCollough
Chris Lott's Cosmopoetica
Chad Parenteau
Little Emerson
Fever, Light--by Sawako Nakayasu
Second Wish
Nomadics
Alison Croggon
Radical Druid
Ron is Ron: the Ron Silliman Cartoon by Jim Behrle
Dagzine: Positions, Poetics, Populations: Gary Norris
Shadows within Shadows: Tom Beckett
Self Similar Writing: Jukka Pekka Kervinen
The Little Workshop: Cassie Lewis
Sky Bright: Jay Rosevear
Poesy Galore: Emily Lloyd
Lisa Jarnot's Blog
Poetry Hut: Jilly Dybka (has moved here)
Pornfeld: Michael Hoerman
Seven Apples: Justin Ulmer
Hi Spirits: Andrew Burke
Bacon Bargain!: Joe Massey
Ivy is here: Ivy Alvarez
Whimsy Speaks: Jeff Bahr
Umbrella: Jeff Wietor
Chicanas! (Susana L. Gallardo)
Masters of Photography
Blog of Disquiet: Gary Norris' Teaching Blog
Suzanna Gig Jig
Bad with Titles: Jay Thomas
Spaceship Tumblers! Tony Tost
Desert City: Ken Rumble
E-Po
Zotz!
Optative Mood: Tim Morris
ecritures bleues: Laura Carter
The Ingredient: Alli Warren
Skanky Possum Pouch
Slight Publications
Jewishy-Irishy: Laurel Snyder
Sea-Camel: Alberto Romero Bermo
Growing Nations: Jordan Stempleman
Tom Raworth
Entropy and Me: Hal Johnson
Scott Pierce: Snapper's Junk
Chicano Poet: Reyes Cardenas
Semio-Karl M&M
Stephen Vincent
Hoa Nguyen/Teacher's & Writers
a New Word Placements
Narcissus Works: Anny Ballardini
Richard Lopez
Tributary: Allen Bramhall
The_Delay: Chris Vitiello
Jukka Pekka Kervinen: Nonlinear Poetry
Lanny Quarles: Phaneronoemikon
Clifford Duffy: Fictions of Deleuze & Guattari
DagZine
Carrboro Poetry Festival
Steve Evans: Third Factory
DEBORAH PATILLO
SKANKY POSSUM PRESS
Tim Peterson: Mappemunde
WOOD'S LOT
Geof Huth: DBQP
Ann Marie Eldon
Jim Behrle: The Jim Side
Ray Bianchi:Postmodern Collage Poetry
Never Mind the Beasts
Diaryo
New Broom
Flingdump Scattershot
Tony Tost: Unquiet Grave
Grapez
SB POET
Mark Young's Pelican Dreaming
|||AS/IS2|||
Li's A Private Studio
Anny Ballardini's Poet's Corner
Tom Beckett: Vanishing Points
Dumbfoundry
BadGurrrlNest
Jean Vengua's Okir
Hear-it dot org: info on hearing problems
Tim Yu's Tympan
James Yeager's Modern Lives
Tony Robinson: Geneva Convention
Daniel Nestor's Unpleasant Event
Ex-Lion Tamer
Carlos Arribas: Scriptorium
David Nemeth
Ela's Incertain Plume
Mairead Byrne's Heaven
Catherine Daly
Black Spring
Br.Tom's Finish Yr Phrase
Shin Yu Pai: makura-no-soshi
Harry K. Stammer: Downtown LA
Corina's Fledgling Wordsmith
Jilly Dybka's Poetry Hut
Ben Basan's Luminations
Katey: Chewing on Pencils
YaY!! Eileen Tabios: Chatelaine Poetics !
Jill Jones: Ruby Street
Geoffrey Gatza's BlazeVox
Bill Allegrezza's P-Ramblings
Gary Sullivan's Elsewhere
GoldenRuleJones
Poetry_Heat
Bookslut
Chickee's SuperDeluxeGoodPoems
As-Is !
John Latta's Hotel Point
Sawako Nakayasu's Ongoing Show
Shanna Compton's Brand New Insects
Crag Hill
kari edwards: transdada
Fluss
Michael Helsem's Gray Wyvern
Word Placement
Bogue's Blog
Jordan Davis: Equanimity
Robert Flach's Unadulterated Text
Michelle Bautista
Ironic Cinema
Mike Snider
Farewell Tonio!

In Through the Out Door
The Blonde Brunette
Awake at Dawn on Someone's Couch is Toast
Jukka-Pekka Kervinen:Non-Linear
Xpress(ed) !
Chris Lott's Ruminate
Venepoetics
Laura: Yellowslip
Stick Poet Super Hero
Mighty Jens!
Radio UTA: Toni's Thursday Poetry Show
Tim Morris: Lection
Gabe Gudding
Constant Critic
Sappho's Breathing
Waves of Reading
Jhananin's Insite
Fanaticus
AdvExpo
Stephen Vincent
Stephanie Young: New Well Nourished Moon
Kasey Silem Mohammad's Newest Limetree
Lanny Quarles: (solipsis)//:phaneronoemikon
States Writes
Rebecca's Pocket
Simulacro
Braincase Links
Sentence
Sor Juana
73 Urban Bus Journeys
Poeta Empirica
poetry for the people: canwehaveourballback?
Ernesto Priego's Never Neutral
Nick Piombino's Fait Accompli
Weekly Incite blogresearch
Jim Behrle's first monkey
Jim Behrle's Monkey's Gone to Heaven
David Kirschenbaum's Boog City
Not Nick Moudry
Laurable
David Hess Heathens in Heat
Jack Kimball's Pantaloons
Li Bloom's Abolone
Ron Silliman
Chris Sullivan's Bloggchaff
Chris Sullivan's Slight Publications
Chris Sullivan's Department of Culture
Kasey S. Mohammad's Old-New Limetree
Kasey's Old Limetree
James Meetze: Brutal Kittens
Cassie Lewis: The Jetty
Joseph Mosconi's Harlequin Knights
Nada Gordon's Ululate
ultimate: Stephanie Young's First Well Nourished Moon
Steve Evans: Third Factory
Noah Eli Gordon's Human Verb
Jean Vengua's Blue Kangaroo
Sawako Nakayasu: Texture Notes
Free Space Comix: BK Stefans
Crosfader
Malcolm Davidson's eeksy peeksy
Marsh Hawk Press group
Catherine Meng's Porthole Redux
Josh Corey's Cahiers de Corey
Very Nice! Shampoopoetry
UTA's Lit Mag: ZNine
Wild Honey Press
Jacket
JFK's Poetinresidence
Malcolm Davidson's Tram Spark poems
HYepez: RealiTi
HYpez: Mexperimental
Aimee Nez's Gila Monster
BestMaX: Jim Behrle's jismblog
Cori Copp's Littleshirleybean
Jordan Davis: Million Poems
Eileen Tabios: Corpsepoetics [see Chatelaine above]
YaY! Liz's Thirdwish
Ultra Linking
Henry Gould's HG Poetics




Thursday, June 03, 2004

 

YaY--Summer Travel Times!!

Ready to get on the plane, midday tomorrow, for Raleigh/Durham, NC & am really looking forward. I even got a cheapo cell phone for this, so that I can reach folks back here without too much hassle. I've never liked cell phones but here it is, a real-life reason to try the silly things. I'm such a happy dinosaur without all that, honestly.

I have a nice little chapbook I'm bringing (if anyone who can't be there would like a copy, please just send me an email)--of the poems I'll be reading, and a few others. It's titled, Meme Me Up, Scotty! which occured to me today at the last minute when getting the printing chores done. I like all that Me Me Me sonic stuff in it, and then the hokey Star Trek stuff. Poetry seems every-ready (batteries!) on both counts, no? Well, it seemed so when that phrasing for a title occured to me today. But then it also seemed too likely. In fact, so likely that I wondered if I heard it elsewhere--always a scary thought, yes? Does that ever happen to anyone else out there? I usually take my titles from lines in my poems, but this time I thought I'd vary a little (it's still grounded or related that way: the San Francisco poem is in there and it's about morphemics and memes... well, okay, vaguely related, then...grins...).

I picked a nice loud coral pink for its beautifully ugly, trailer park entrance sign kind of cover (just pull yr own ass over, or, Hey-You!do not park here, nonononono). You know that color: looks like those hats and thongs (the foot kind) on sale in Walmart every April for the last 20 years. Or the drinks they make in non-coffee houses. Or umbrellas your mother would never let you have. Therefore you did not even ask for those other things. Beachy, I'm thinkin'. Yeah. Meme Me! Up! Where is Scotty when the show has been over for 20 years!? Damn that engineer, anyway! Don't mistake me for anyone on the bridge, tho, okay? I mean it: none of 'em.

Will be bringing the bloggo-laptop along to Carrboro, and I hear that I can get online okay where I'm staying, but in case it doesn't work out that way, I guess I'm saying goodbye here for a few days (till Tuesday next)--wow: this is the first time ever that Texfiles might not be posting for several days. Damn. That really feels weird!

Anyway, I guess I and all of Y'all will happily reconvene sometime tomorrow night if I have the right connection, or if not, then sometime mid-next-week.

Either way, well,

ZaZen, Y'ALL !!


chris at 11:52 PM |

 

Excited here: getting ready to leave tomorrow for the YaY!!

Carrboro Poetry Festival,

which is organized by Carrboro Poet Laureate, Patrick Herron--who was also a Texfiles Poet of the Week, once upon a time last fall... : )

I leave tomorrow, and the festival goes all weekend. I read on Sunday afternoon. Can't wait to meet folks there in NC. Here's some press stuff I clipped out of an email from Patrick yesterday:

An article should soon appear in the Independent Weekly:

Durham Indy Week


The new issue should already be on newsstands.

The Chapel Hill News ran an article available on newsstands today;
here's the web version:

The Chapel Hill News

Also, if I didn't mention it yesterday, the Chapel Hill Herald also ran
an article that ran in print yesterday:

Chapel Hill Herald

And tomorrow, I will be on "The State of Things" from noon to 1PM along
with John Balaban and Jeffery Beam to talk about the festival. It will
be on the local NPR station (WUNC 91.5 in the Triangle).



chris at 9:29 AM |

 

Websites discussing Gloria Anzaldua--from Cherrie Moraga and others:


These following sites offer tributes, elegies, comments and discussions about the loss of Gloria Anzaldua, but they also offer information about her tremendous contributions to writing and to poetry as community.

The first one here, Chicanas dot com, opens with a letter from Anzaldua's collaborator and close friend in research and writing (for many projects, but probably the most well known is Making Face Making Soul, Cherrie Moraga:

In Memory: Gloria Evangelina Anzaldua, 1942-2004

This next one is one from Queery dot com,a tribute/obit that I hadn't seen yet, so was glad to see it since I've been kinda keen to understand the reponse to this significant loss:

Queery dot com

And there is this interesting inquiry, where the livejournal site, Global Feminisms (by Carolyn Z?), is questioning and petitioning NOW, the National Organization of Women on ignoring news about a significant feminist (Anzaldua). There is some interesting commentary questioning how prominent feminist- & diversity- minded organizations such as NOW seem entirely to have let this event regarding Anzaldua be ignored.

I have to add here that in the breaking news coverage there definitely was some hesitancy to announce and to discuss. I have heard it was out of respect for Gloria Anzaldua's family's wishes to keep a low profile, which in turn was due to Anzaldua's last wishes. But I also wonder if it was exacerbated by mainstream tendencies to marginalize lives such as Anzaldua's: lesbian & woman of color & woman at the boundaries of multiple nationalities and ethnicities.


cm


chris at 12:11 AM |

Wednesday, June 02, 2004

 

hahahaahahahahhahahahhah!

David got it just right, in the comment box below my Tornado/TS Eliot post, by writing:

"In the room the puppy licks the toes
Talking of Michelangelo"--David Nemeth


chris at 2:51 PM |

 

On Tornados I Have Known, and T.S. Eliot's Fixation with Toes


Greg wrote to me (see comment box below) with kindly concern over the post I made last night, mid-tornado, and I went to respond but ended up with this lengthy exposition, which was more pixel-bits than Haloscan allows me in one box, so I'm posting it here:

Thanks for the concern and the good wishes, Greg. This is the fourth tornado we've been through since moving here in 1996, and I am still not used to it (people say you get used to it--not me, I guess, though I do try). I grew up in New York state, where we had bad winter storms, sure, but not these intermittent and sudden, apocalyptic weather crisises such as tornados.

Well this time, I thought, before the power went out, that I could try getting used to it by blogging-away that worst part of the storm. Bloggy-therapy for storm anxiety! I was going to just keep posting (sort of like the professional advice sometimes heard as *just keep talking*) from the weird scene of a bathtub hide-out until things settled down. And I was thinking, nervously, how funny all this really is: having to blog from a bathtub in a dire storm with Miss Universe candidates strutting around in back-breaking highheels and slitted glittery dresses an puffs of faux blue smoke in their wake for special effects with a scrawl line below the screen telling people in my area to take cover, as well as a quick switch over to adverts for better toothpaste (all true!-- and I did see Miss Australia just before the power went out)--and my fingers so jittery I could hardly type--how banal! How real. How absolutely Texas, too, this odd mix of banal media and terrifying or dire straits. But then, alas, ta ta to the electric power! This is the first time that the electric power has gone out for me all night in one of these, so my therapeutic plan was lost to other concerns.

All told, the experience of this sort of thing makes you wake up and take stock, that's for sure. I mean, I've lived in places without electricity and other urban amenities (wilderness areas of Arizona) at times in my life, and for long periods (years), so it really doesn't freak me out not to have such things. The problem's more the suddenness and the immensity in the power of the storm, the potential for, the enactment of and then the fact of real destruction, accompanied by the unexpected loss of electricity at the worst moment (even a TV is a comfort of sorts in that kind of moment). And today I haven't looked at any news to see what the outcome was. I deplore that lingering over fear and destruction which media coverage promotes (on everything).

I do hope the rest of the folks around here are okay, too. Will check on it today. Right now, though, things outside look alright: there's a security guy making rounds in a whirring little golf cart here at daughter Heather's swanky apartment complex. (Even more banal?)

Her new puppy is asleep at my feet but stirs every now and then to--unreal: to lick my toes! Daughter Heather had asked me what to name him, so I offered T. S. (Sir) Eliot, and that is what he got... this pudgy little golden retriever, soon to be huge, I take it. But hey: hahaha: hard to imagine T.S. Eliot licking anyone's toes, no? Well it's happenin' here... and it tickles! So, (I can't resist this:) toe-nados, anyone?

Anyways, my blogging plan of last night didn't quite work out except for that first post!

Best,

Chris


chris at 12:06 PM |

 

Okay--everyone here that I know of is okay. That's always the problem: trying to locate the kids (now that they are more or less grown, they are off with friends & such), but everyone checked in and things are well enough. My power went out, and is still out, so I came over to daughter Heather's apartment since the power stayed on here. Wow: these things really wring me out! But hey, it's over for now, ya know?


chris at 12:08 AM |

Tuesday, June 01, 2004

 

Yikes!--tornado showing up here on all the weather radars.

The weather watchers keep interrupting what I guess is the Miss World show [later note: it was the Miss Universe show} on TV--amazing amount of Barbie-babes, I am unhappy to report (vis, image of women theories and practices). I hardly ever watch TV except like now to check when the weather looks dangerous or if something on. heavy, heavy, silent and hot air. Just like the books and movies say it is supposed to be just before a tornado. Kinda scary. Arlington's warned to take cover--so am blogging from the bathtub (no water of course)--that's where they tell you to hide-out for these things. YOu're supposed to haul a mattress over yourself. I think that must only be to distract you from jumping right out of yr skin because it feels so, I don't know, um, adrenalin-thick all over everything (I always wonder where the birds take cover: trees?-I mean, gee, won't they get blown out?) On TV they tell you to take cover. And then they immediately broadcast a lot of advertising about sinus headache drugs and minty fresh toothpaste. I don't use either one so it's, um, definitely wasted rhetoric here... :) I can tell, though, from my oddball ear (my chronic middle and inner ear problems on the left side) that something's going on: everything just suddenly got all fuzzy and tight inside that part of my head. Oh, hey, there goes the tornado warning outside, big sirens going off, at least I think that's what I hear. Hard to say. Going to check the TV again now. More soon....


chris at 8:55 PM |

 

hahaha ... check out this site: it's great!

Thanks, Bill Allegrezza, who first posted the link.
It made me laugh out loud. But then I realized when I read down the site that so many folks emailing this outfit were absolutely right: it *is* so unfair
to the chimps...


chris at 5:54 PM |

 

More YaY!! for Jukka!

I am so glad to see that so many are noticing and commenting on Jukka's new experiments with form. I don't recall the exact date but it's in my archives here somewhere (maybe last fall when he first started doing this newish form?)--but I have for some time now been happily following the new ways that Jukka is experimenting, especially to text as texture, one of my favorite interest areas. The first ones he did, that I saw, appeared on As/Is, and so I posted here in response and in a comment to Jukka at the time, saying they reminded me of what happens when we try to read ancient texts, for instance, Sappho's (one of my research areas), that are handed down or found only in the (so-called) fragmented form.

And now I will add this comment, too: actually, "fragment," I have written elsewhere about in a researched essay, is not exactly the right term for this matter. A more accurate descriptor would be *remnant* (a term that noted translator of the ancients, Denys Page, used in reference to Sappho's poems when he wrote to introduce his first volume of her work), so to refer more in keeping with the referent's figural chain of logic: remnant refers to cloth and memoria, just as text originally refered to weaving of cloth--all of which connote ease of pliability, and perhaps a sort of thickened fluidity. That other unfortunate usage, fragment, refers more to rock/stone, glass, wood, and other less pliable or not so fluidly manageable materials (though of course these also are slowly fluid over time). So, in terms of texture, the remnants now being worked by Jukka (and did I read somewhere that Mark Young is also going to be doing some of this with Jukka?), are more cloth-like, to my mind, and sometimes the letters even look torn, as would cloth, or paper, or papyrus.

It's a wonderful mode for that evocativeness of texture: that text/texture can be so invoked, and no less, as a form of historical memoria, memento, something that connects so many things all at once. A few weeks ago when Jukka posted frames of huge colorful letters, one of which was the term, texture, I was fasinated: that turn of event in Jukka's new mode made it meta, too, but not in any kind of solipsistic way. I just think this stuff rocks, theory-wise, Jukka! So glad to see it.


chris at 3:40 PM |

 

If you haven't already, then do check out David Nemeth's roll-through on Bernstein's exercises in experimental poetry. I got an email from David yesterday, inviting me to add to the experiment # 1 chain poem--happy to say, and to do so, yes! The poem's an intriguing version that came from Jean. David says he will be publishing the chain on his blog when it's done--I can't wait to see the entire result! I'm definitely looking forward to this fun and inspiring way of "translating"--thanks for doing this, David!


chris at 1:38 PM |

 

from Laura Riding * :

Dear Possible


Dear Possible, and if you drown,
Nothing is lost, unless my empty hands
Claim the conjectured corpse
Of empty water--a legal vengence
On my own earnestness.

Dear creature of event, and if I wait the clock,
And if the clock be punctual and you late,
Rail against me, my time, my clock,
And rightfully correct me
With wrong, lateness, and ill-temper.

Dear scholar of love
If by your own formula
I open heaven to you
When you knock punctually at the door,
Then you are there, but I where I was.

And I mean that fate in the scales
Is up, down, even, trembling,
Right, Wrong, weighing and unweighing,
And I mean that, dear possible,
That fate, that dear fate.

(33)

* * *


The World and I


This is not exactly what I mean
Any more than the sun is the sun.
But how to mean more closely
If the sun shines approximately?
What a world of awkwardness!
What hostile implements of sense!
Perhaps this is as close a meaning
As perhaps becomes such knowing.
Else I think the world and I
Must live together as strangers and die--
A sour love, each doubtful whether
Was ever a thing to love the other.
No, better for both to be nearly sure
Each of each--exactly where
Exactly I and exactly the world
Fail to meet by a moment, and a word.

(56)



*Laura (Riding) Jackson, Selected Poems in Five Sets. Persea, 1970.



 

Powered By Blogger TM