"in tagalog, instead of saying 'whatever happens happens' we say 'bahala na si batman' which loosely translates to 'let batman handle it' and i think that’s beautiful" —@kmillz.lol
bardic grimoary & notions
"in tagalog, instead of saying 'whatever happens happens' we say 'bahala na si batman' which loosely translates to 'let batman handle it' and i think that’s beautiful" —@kmillz.lol
Pieces of long-lost Louis Sullivan.
"The ancestors you choose will determine the writer you become." —Eliot Weinberger via
Eating Lotos with Alfred.
"al-fustaq"
loadmanage lures · lichen
survive on Mars · watertower pale
against troubled sky
head & arm of Liberty · on a harsh beach
the opera singer · in a deserted square
the windshield dusted with sprinkles · at an idle overpass
"strong impetus nothing of the kind"
song of the garage door
not the sound of it opening
draw a map where you'll be going
always reuse a plastic bag
hoard of calibrations
all the lights of them scurried off
this veering t'ward earth
after so long above
not presented as conundrums
but perfect textures
look up from deep reading
at a high cold window
song of the garage door
Most of the movies i go to see would have been much better as claymation.
"An observation for literary sociology: in 'genre fiction,' a boarding school is a place where the protagonist learns the dark art of magic; in 'literary fiction,' a boarding school is a place where the protagonist learns the dark truth of eros. It’s like the difference between Jung and Freud."
—@johnpistelli
Oannes
a fishy story
dropped the onus
Oannes
would uplift in earnest
these dancing apes' telemetry
Oannes
a fishy story
IDK what everyone's talking about, the Great American State Fair looks great.
a summer that will end
takes up so little space
like carrying flints
as all the other mischiefs braid
in the downfall of bitumen
in the afternoon of the human
fireworks ply the welkin
our small faiths don't refurbish
i scrawl in Elvish
epic like misshapen gherkin
an end to summer
"Poems should echo and reecho against each other… They cannot live alone any more than we can.” —Jack Spicer via
Pretending to be a 6-foot bird so an orphaned baby doesn’t imprint on humans.
"An apocalypse is the opposite of a dream. A dream is falser than the outer life. But the end of the world is more actual than the world it ends." —GK Chesterton
"Patronage
O for the days of assassin-dispatching, cousin-poisoning
Renaissance dukes with an ear for beauty in ottava rima,
Of big-spending cutthroat Borgias in papal regalia
Willing to lavish blood-slick ducats on the fine arts,
Kings with rotten teeth who hanged pickpockets from bridges
But paid their pet playwrights a living wage, sherbet-sipping
Sultans who shuttle between the harem and the mehfil,
O for my very own surveillance-state Caesar Augustus
Asking only that every so often a stanza liken him to Jove,
O for a dissolute aesthetic Pasha, or a Medici who gets me,
Or some Rilkean widow offering a rent-free seaside castle,
Anything but this committee of rivals and fossils,
Unpublishable judges with grudges in a coffee conclave
Glancing at my heart like a passport handed over
At heaven’s border, snug mediocrities with slovenly offices
Deciding whether I am fit to have a future here, the light
From my unwritten books still light years in the distance
Reaching me for now, though there’s no way to tell
If they’ve blinked out already, making way for the tenured night."
—Amit Majmudar via
Now that we know the backstory.
port marrowpall mimsy
swatch switchblade
massacre arch triumph
laughable swarm
drizzles in my eyes of sixty summers fled
same cicadas razz at me
“…we will inquire into something, but we will not grasp it, if in some way we depart from ourselves and from our own nature…” —Aristocreon recovered from Vesuvius via
"Why would anyone in the EU invest here? The people are too stupid. There are maybe 100 smart people in the whole country. The only way to get something to work in this place is to send in a bunch of Germans to run it." (Sounds like Texas actually.)
"Frustration aside, Rimbaud’s procurement of weapons for Menelik II may have been his greatest contribution to modern African history. Scholars reckon that the guns he sold in 1887 likely helped the emperor defeat Italy in 1896 when the country’s troops tried to invade Ethiopia. As a result of the rout at Adwa, Italy signed a treaty recognizing Ethiopia as an independent nation."
—BuzzEthiopia via
"Oil is dead biomass in the same way that value is dead labor."
"urgentissimo"
pressure of crass pilcrow
plink stillicide roster
weathered wood fence angstrom
aware of spare changes
& the skyhigh fishhook
Putin's Ashes. (via)
a low broken place in the concrete
black dirt accumulates
in a sort of shape
a sort of story
classical when i turn the car on
It’s interesting to me how scifi doesn’t much talk about Tiptree anymore. She’s a double scandal & reveals too much about scifidom in her success & her failure. Malzberg probably did it best. He had an unmatched feel for all the people that being a professional writer destroyed.
"One of the most egregious acts of Treason ever committed."
"In France, he got a three-year jail term for desecrating a bank — more than what Nadya got for desecrating a church." —Evgenia via
Tell them there's nothing left of the tribes of the Internet.
"captivity narrative"
wakeful flicker warren
warped candle carport
& pet grizzly greatcoat
granular quern banquet
sleep with its slant pinball
Some Great Books of the 20th century.
"saw the country
and returned—now deep at night
I lie in bed and
fields of mustard flowers
bloom before my eyes"
—Masaoka Shiki
(Sept 17, 1867 - Sept 19, 1902)
Tr. Janine Beichman via @evecastle.bsky.social
"Won’t some dice decide most now?" —Anthony Etherin
"A Being darkly wise, and rudely great."
"By suffering willingly what we cannot avoid, we secure ourselves from vain and immoderate disquiet; we preserve for better purposes that strength which would be unprofitably wasted in wild efforts of desperation, and maintain that circumspection which may enable us to seize every support and improve every alleviation. This calmness will be more easily obtained, as the attention is more powerfully withdrawn from the contemplation of unmingled unabated evil, and diverted to those accidental benefits which prudence may confer on every state." —Samuel Johnson, The Rambler, no. 150
returning since the lockdown to my own pinched shelves
then less with fluttery encroachment
a pastel blaze outside or churn of sad machines
loud returning since the lockdown
violate ancestral tombs with glist'ning spades
stone gestures the jungle claims
dusty Accord with broken window, suitcase trunk
a line on a story might be told
green shade i glide beneath & clearer now discern
written in pencil on cardboard boxes
cliff mansion clinch
clabbered vertigo
green algae pillage
grope in thick darkness
brake lines cut at brainstem
bruise upon the ruse sky
these empty rooms ample
error in snide parrot
music box a skullful
green algae pillage
damage of the years
smaller & smaller circles
smile on the ghost catcher
rabbit waits
as i walk to my gray car
clear peroxide clyster
priestcraft shrouds the pool
bags carried out the back door
ricochet cathedral
pillage green algae
"Every Italian I have ever spoken to about it regards the dubbing of films as an art form, in and of itself; many regard certain examples of it as equivalent, or even superior, to the original films; and Italian doppiatori (the fact that we do not really use any English word is telling) are sometimes as famous in Italy as the actors that they dub." —Alexander Fayne via
Of course, the funny thing to me about 70s-nostalgia is, having come of age in that time, what i remember is the feeling of belatedness: i was too young to have seen all the fun that was the 60s. via
"a shift in the center of gravity from the journal to the online blog"
asides of the machine · at dusk
slip through my fingers
confirmed carnivore · pearl gray car on a rack
as i wait at the light
"This is interesting. I've attempted to make my own translations of some of the shorter poems.
This one possibly refers to his wife being brunette & his mistress being blonde. I don't know if critics have discussed the point before."
pale ultramarine · rumble of speed bumps
overplus ounce · three red lights
empty storefronts · the next big thing
feral architecture
pale ultramarine · classical guitar
"Hello to another day spent guzzling water while surrounded by cooling fans. It's like being Gregor Samsa if he woke up to find himself transformed into a datacentre." —@johncoulthart.com
"Running public elementary schools like a corporation was never a good idea for the life of learning, any more than it was a good idea for the life of art to create and sell over-hyped and correspondingly overpriced art-like commodities in corporate galleries and auction houses."
—Christopher Benson via
"physical media"
no foothold
on the cold bright fairway
caves measureless mutter
unmerciful curses
pullulating pitfalls
perne furnace
fedayeen Finntroll
How Softly Runs the Afternoon.
my burdens
the shadow of a leaf
“We cannot understand what happens in the universe. What is glorious in it is united with what is full of horror. What is full of meaning is united to what is senseless. The spirit of the universe is at once creative and destructive — it creates while it destroys and destroys while it creates, and therefore it remains to us a riddle. And we must inevitably resign ourselves to this.”
— Albert Schweitzer via @johnstoszkowski
For most of my life whenever i try to talk about his book to other poets they think i made it up.
Weariness of being a conduit.
"The ruling class is not in denial about the trajectory of the world it has built."
"blue-veined kinsman"
1.
skincells winging hourly
cake the window sill
what does the hand retain
batteries on the menu
marooned
in the last cup
2.
put things back because of the cost
only necessary lights
i join
& i take apart
dim canyons of greenish ice
3.
jisei & signing · sep'rate rooms
the car breaks this · & then that
furrows in the sky · ferrying smash
it's so cheap now · robot death
before dawn scribbling · no new outcome
bright conjunction · which planets
i will not visit
"There were worse degradations earlier in the week. There will be worse ones next wee."
The Arrogant History of White Ben.
cicadas drowned out
for a moment by airplane
as i check the mail
"One in ten classical Tamil words are Sanskrit-origin, with a higher percentage for religious writings and a lower percentage for everyday Tamil. This is actually on the lower end for Dravidian languages. Telugu, spoken in Andhra Pradhesh, has a thirty percent Sanskrit vocabulary; for Kannada, spoken in Karnataka, almost half the words come from Sanskrit, roughly the same percentage shown by Hindi. But Hindi is written in Sanskrit’s script, while the others are not."
—Amit Majmudar via
Reading Gravity's Rainbow in Hiroshima.
Yoin.
"Q: When referring to the upcoming 250th anniversary of the founding of our country, do we really have to use that awful word semiquincentennial?
A: No! Sestercentennial means the same thing, and it’s much easier to say!" —@alanhorn
"Hymn
I know if I find you I will have to leave the earth
and go on out
over the sea marshes and the brant in bays
and over the hills of tall hickory
and over the crater lakes and canyons
and on up through the spheres of diminishing air
past the blackset noctilucent clouds
where one wants to stop and look
way past all the light diffusions and bombardments
up farther than the loss of sight
into the unseasonal undifferentiated empty stark
And I know if I find you I will have to stay with the earth
inspecting with thin tools and ground eyes
trusting the microvilli sporangia and simplest
coelenterates
and praying for a nerve cell
with all the soul of my chemical reactions
and going right on down where the eye sees only traces
You are everywhere partial and entire
You are on the inside of everything and on the outside
I walk down the path down the hill where the sweetgum
has begun to ooze spring sap at the cut
and I see how the bark cracks and winds like no other bark
chasmal to my ant-soul running up and down
and if I find you I must go out deep into your
far resolutions
and if I find you I must stay here with the separate leaves
—A R Ammons
Once i was walking down a road next to national forest & heard a loud thrashing nearby. I was sure it was a bear. Five minutes later an armadillo walked out. Not even a big armadillo.
"The Night Is Freezing Fast
The night is freezing fast,
To-morrow comes December;
And winterfalls of old
Are with me from the past;
And chiefly I remember
How Dick would hate the cold.
Fall, winter, fall; for he,
Prompt hand and headpiece clever,
Has woven a winter robe,
And made of earth and sea
His overcoat for ever,
And wears the turning globe."
—A.E. Housman
"beiged out"
novel in the present tense · prong of witness
habit cohort · killing floor
the one way of rain · sharp wilderness
cough like gravel · finely grained
parts of a story · fairly stupid
tumblecearthward · parallel
tell 'em a hookah- · smoking character
has given · you the call
prong of witness · when you're ten feet tall
"...however apically Volapucky..." —Finnegans Wake
"Berryman once tried to provoke his mother into a confession, reserving for her a front seat for a lecture he gave on Hamlet at Princeton, in which he examined in psychoanalytical detail the play’s murderous family dynamics. Steelier than Gertrude, Martha rather brilliantly outwitted her son, leaving her seat vacant until he was well underway, and eventually making a dramatic entrance in high heels and a startlingly bright dress." —Mark Ford via
Pynchons ranked (with useful summaries). And Dickens.
"broken spigot"
shelves i never nudge
as the new thwarts chortle
taste of rye bread, rostrum
ruinous speech leechcraft
machines-breaking shockwave
funest shoptalk festers
in a slow moment slaughter
slesters the void's 'roid-rage
ricochet cathedral
stickleback bardsweat
nothing but pith cancer
appalls with moon-pinball
to crawl through this miremaze
"imperious shadow"
throat chakra goblin · Scriabin gust
alone with quids · quacking dark
cannot solve inly · carping about
in dim scrollops · skullcap quaff
to the blank morrow
The best albums from China in 2026... so far.
"To obtain the monkeys used in the climactic sequence, Herzog paid several locals to trap 400 monkeys. He paid them half in advance and was to pay the other half upon receipt. The trappers sold the monkeys to someone in Los Angeles or Miami, and Herzog came to the airport just as the monkeys were being loaded to be shipped out of the country. He pretended to be a veterinarian and claimed that the monkeys needed vaccinations before leaving the country. Abashed, the handlers handed the monkeys over to Herzog, who used them in the shot they were required for, then released them afterwards into the jungle." —@kentpeterson
"The North Pole is not where it used to be."
"When the world came back steadied, in the big carred-up arena, tyres were still burning."
—Barefoot in the Head
"pink world wrapped in salt clouds"
a bedrock wusp that all mild rhapsodies perjure
& even cynical mischief serves as vessel
seraph if stewed in this murk we fain would wrestle
questions out of Dante's lark & pitchfork-urger.
getting things done, the plaintive dog in the manger,
when all one wants is spraypaint on a trestle,
into bulleted tasks would shoehorn epistle
& murmur. cultivate the will to injure.
coal seams being slow to self-extinguish,
waiting on days that carry the lesser stigma
so tiny you could keep it in a matchbox
so vast it blots out even the blaze of anguish.
my burnished steering wheel discerns enigma
after enigma: one-off, flow & batch-mocks.
god piƱata
piece of the true cross · Pete Townsend whacked
muggy as shit · we muggles
under stern pylons · pullulate steps
eyes glued to screens · full of gloze
now the truck speeds up · clock's now heeded
mackerel sky · amok grays
should i gather up · shards of pages
stuck in this lane · blocked lewdly
crease of a prune toss · westerly tend
ripples the pool · rain but raised
sing in the doldrum · you know the drill
bodybags heap · block heaven
rotting from the top · terrible smile
emptiness reached · into core
drive with myrmidons · in the same cars
cobweb drooling · dreams of peace
"By 1967, it had nowhere left to go but here: a rundown mansion in a town called Sleepy Junction, repurposed as the headquarters of an organization with the acronym M.O.T.H.E.R. — Master Organization To Halt Enemy Resistance — its three ranking agents played by men who, a generation earlier, would have been billed above the title in any picture they appeared in."
—Zachariah Malachi via
The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.