"...Sergei Khoruzhii, something of a Renaissance man among whose quite unbelievable achievements is translating Joyce’s Ulysses into Russian." —Victoria Stoilova via
Daughter, your frontier is the brutal jut and dint of their conditioning.
bardic grimoary & notions
"...Sergei Khoruzhii, something of a Renaissance man among whose quite unbelievable achievements is translating Joyce’s Ulysses into Russian." —Victoria Stoilova via
Daughter, your frontier is the brutal jut and dint of their conditioning.
On the E at Delphi. (Along with citing modern attempts at interpretation.)
“I fight against the gluttony of time with so many very amusing weapons,–with gestures and with attitudes and with wholly charming phrases; with tears, and with tinsel, and with sugar-coated pills, and with platitudes slightly regilded. Yes, and I fight him also with little mirrors wherein gleam confusedly the corruptions of all lust, and ruddy loyalty, and a bit of moonshine, and the pure diamond of the heart’s desire, and the opal cloudings of human compromise: but, above all, I fight that ravening dotard with the might of my own folly.” —The Way of Ecben
"For years after I would wake shrieking."
"Góngora: De la brevedad engañosa de la Vida
No less than the swift arrow solicited
a mark sharply destined to be bitten,
nor with more silence than the agonistic chariot
glided across mute sands to a winning finish,
does our century run to its prompt, secret end. Who doubts,
though he be beast destitute of reason,
yet may he read the portent of every dawn.
Carthage testifies, & still you don’t admit it?
You’ll run into trouble, Licio, if you persist
in chasing phantoms & embracing frauds…
Badly the hours’ll account you to yourself:
the hoürs that are grinding down the days,
the days that are gnawing away the years."
(my translation)
"This site is making me think Plato was right about banning poets from the republic"
—@jordandavis3
The poetry of the pseudoscience of poetry.
"To the moneyed amateurs who ushered the subject into universities at the beginning of the twentieth century (men who fondled poems like antique clocks and ranked novelists like vintages of claret) the study of literature was 'a glory of the universe' or 'the spring which unlocks the hidden life'." —James Marriott via
"Eyes filled with wonder, she went home and changed her baby’s Vietnamese name to an American one."
"How Poetry Comes to Me
It comes blundering over the
Boulders at night, it stays
Frightened outside the
Range of my campfire
I go to meet it at the
Edge of the light"
—Gary Snyder via
“The Fountain
All through the deep blue night
The fountain sang alone;
It sang to the drowsy heart
Of the satyr carved in stone.
The fountain sang and sang,
But the satyr never stirred–
Only the great white moon
In the empty heaven heard.
The fountain sang and sang
While on the marble rim
The milk-white peacocks slept,
And their dreams were strange and dim.
Bright dew was on the grass,
And on the ilex, dew,
The dreamy milk-white birds
Were all a-glisten, too.
The fountain sang and sang
The things one cannot tell;
The dreaming peacocks stirred
And the gleaming dew-drops fell.”
—Sara Teasdale, Stars To-night (1930)
A hundred photographs of stairways.
"The gothic, in my view, is the story of the dead coming back, told in a thousand decaying houses."
"bsky needs a sad like button" —@wristroom.bsky.social
"I doubt it helps for it to be categorized as science fiction, or for it to be categorized at all."
"Like any good son, I pull my father out
of the water, drag him by his hair
through white sand, his knuckles carving a trail
the waves rush in to erase. Because the city
beyond the shore is no longer
where we left it. Because the bombed
cathedral is now a cathedral
of trees. I kneel beside him to see how far
I might sink. Do you know who I am,
Ba? But the answer never comes. The answer
is the bullet hole in his back, brimming
with seawater. He is so still I think
he could be anyone's father, found
the way a green bottle might appear
at a boy's feet containing a year
he has never touched..."
—Ocean Vuong via
"looking for where i thought was the obvious place"
Penderecki pizza
unpacked by foul owllight
once dripping sparks burgeon
sippy cup costs bupkis
"Both novels are meditations on the aftermath. They ask the same question: what remains after the fall of meaning? " —Brock Eldon via
I want to steal that typeface.
"In the wake of the Michael Jackson biopic success, producers are now planning a John Wayne Gacy movie that focuses only on his career as a clown." —@frankconiff.bsky.social
lights with me
here & to the end:
should give them names
brighter as the landscape dims,
by saffron figments sained;
i clasp & release no solider show.
so cardboard season
with fiery glee will soon bedizen
& i who left such dreams
say: this is not my crimson.
Some giant solar flares lately.
century's gem, sampo
filtered softly wharf-left
eyes on the prose, prickly
practicum teeth-umgang
decades mix, still this diction
that drifts t'ward riftshade
amber & what utters
an orc skull at cull tide
"You look at these photos for 3 seconds and the AI tells. Are there."
"In Italian, the word tempo is used for both weather and time. A compromise for everything that lies beyond our control, yet remains within reach in the long run." —Jörgen Löwenfeldt (via
the velocity
of chocolate is invariant
mountain lantern tent
test filigree dugout
Rushmore rapist septic
& room sorted warthog
Delphi has its dizzy
derelictions tricksome
floaters attest darkflirt
of the flak-dodge lodger
vacuoles hold hawkish
hymns, gatherer's purview
i move to next nervetwinge
not adroit loitering
carousel with killers
crisp centipede cupcakes
whirlcrake & thick whinny
whiplash from the diptych
charcoal gray & sky gridlock
"Philomela
It ended sooner than a song,
The thing he did without a word.
They hadn’t known each other long.
It ended sooner than a song,
And no-one seemed to think it wrong:
She was not changed into a bird.
It ended sooner than a song,
The thing he did without a word."
—Matthew Buckley Smith via
"Caroline’s new book Monsters in the Archives: My Year of Fear with Stephen King describes asking King why he used 'The Emperor of Ice-Cream', and he said 'the Stevens poems is about death and also about the ephemeral quality of life (ice cream melts fast)' but also picked out 'her feet protruding: horny, cold and dumb'. He added, I think very charmingly, 'let’s face it, Caroline, I was working to a large extent in an EC comics pulp horror vein, and I wanted to class up the joint a bit'." —Sam Leith via
"You wouldn’t feed a child nothing but candy and call it dinner, but you feed your mind nothing but content and call it thinking." —@whitenoise
"Redbrick rubric pantisocracy"
abstract sculpture orpiment
Illig's daze figment
we craze to find floors gone
crenulated inbox
pothole full & pillaged
report stolen mortmain
commute L33T Scarlatti
pass long dead confederates
abstract orpiment sculpture
Boring Classics that are Actually Unhinged.
"Brutalist alma mater"
dead soldiers & Nixon's clubhouse
navigate
the gowned antheaps
wooden gate gadding
some gilded thrall squalor
brutal brillig · red door optional
plastic jug
aglow Isis
horseshoe Biscayne shinto
shattering dead medflies
"My favorite James Baldwin line: 'There is a reason, after all, that some people wish to colonize the moon, and others dance before it as an ancient friend.' " —@thehumanityarchive
"The purpose of an artistic star system is to undermine solidarity." —@jacobwren.bsky.social
"the lonely robot"
postman's perne smashtannies
repair itself veering
resume scant lattice
soft mission of nesh days
songs as before faze this
furious still hollow
wrap-up better buildmaze
barely erect victor
saving bread when Rome burns
truth barrier dreeing
distant witness werewolf
welds cobweb to feldspar
"Cyril Connolly had a fantasy about owning a ganadería where he would train bulls to murder matadors."
"You ever try to code switch at work and fail? 😂."
"the watcher of a rock"
crakeshinies · on a crooked wind
much curdled
flow of monsters
stories of downfall · stories of treachery
too long bent · over silver laptop
Commuter cycling in the Dallas area.
" The historian discovered that all the mentions of natural phenomena recorded in the Welsh annals appear to have occurred at the times scientists had calculated corresponding events did – and these events included one mentioned in an entry that also names King Arthur." —Bernard Mees via
"The canvas has an idiotic stare, and mesmerizes some painters so that they turn into idiots themselves." —Vincent via
It’s not just a calamity, it’s a pandemic.
"XIV. Star-Winds
It is a certain hour of twilight glooms,
Mostly in autumn, when the star-wind pours
Down hilltop streets, deserted out-of-doors,
But shewing early lamplight from snug rooms.
The dead leaves rush in strange, fantastic twists,
And chimney-smoke whirls round with alien grace,
Heeding geometries of outer space,
While Fomalhaut peers in through southward mists.
This is the hour when moonstruck poets know
What fungi sprout in Yuggoth, and what scents
And tints of flowers fill Nithon’s continents,
Such as in no poor earthly garden blow.
Yet for each dream these winds to us convey,
A dozen more of ours they sweep away!"
—H P Lovecraft
Babe wake up, the Pontiff is baudrillard-posting.
"HPL
Those streets were not his
so he kept them in the dark to himself
knowing age for a solid pent in mind
he turned out volumes of locked domed hills
Penciled purples in the daylit dreams
wore wool humid and apology bright
letters in the doorway, arabic at the edges
the colors of science turned jagged at his cease
He was not Poe, he lived on a hill
dreamed afternoon and woke to write
icecream from ivory, an undersea
crystallized Providence cats broke
out of the past and Fomalhaut speaking"
—Clark Coolidge
“Those who are willing to be vulnerable move among mysteries.”
― Theodore Roethke via @poeticoutlaws
"Did ever he walk the twenty-six wards of the city, within and
extra, did he cast his nautic eye on her
clere and lusty under kell
in the troia'd lanes of the city?"
—The Anathemata, V.
"i wish children would be temporarily elevated to the skies until the war ends
then they would return home safe
and when their parents would ask them,
where were you? they would say,
we were playing in the clouds”
- Ghassan Kanafani via @gazapoetssociety
pursuit of closures · in the growing dusk
puzzles climb
crag rosary
story lurches · a large spider
with a small head
"Within the great aquarium of language the light refracts and can bounce by inclinations not previously observed." —J H Prynne
"This was no time to consider the mother-baby aspects of the firebeast ecology nor to quote from Edgar A Guest at great length." --Emil Petaja, Lord of the Green Planet (1967)
"hereness"
Atlantis mints owllight
& lush drifting cliffthreats
warning sign
wags insolence
redspangled · spigots of hark
familiar coil merging
mitigates dense frenzy
pale yellow
yearn pentacle
necromancer's · mercy to wander
"the audacious proposal"
Gegenschein-flavored dreams
wake to smoke foaming
no shirt pocket at all
sharpened by the cold
my outline in the dark glass
insight is the best catnip
Thinking about the immortality of the crab.
"What if it were the other way around? What if the faculty of storytelling were not specifically human but rather the last remnant of our animal selves?"
- Amitav Ghosh, Gun Island via @jacobwren.bsky.social
"We often write our poems as if they were our last words."
"I replaced doomscrolling with the company of fractal machine elves dwelling on the other side of a chrysanthemum-like mandala. Here’s what happened" —@rmhaines
"...deep inside stalactite town there were these big huntsmen spiders gripping slabs of rock."
"Prophecy
I shall die hidden in a hut
In the middle of an alder wood,
With the back door blind and bolted shut,
And the front door locked for good.
I shall lie folded like a saint,
Lapped in a scented linen sheet
On a bedstead striped with bright-blue paint,
Narrow and cold and neat.
The midnight will be glassy black
Behind the panes, with wind about
To set his mouth against a crack
And blow the candle out."
—Elinor Wylie
"space needle"
i knew it well
a long, long time ago
skyey wheel
i knew it well
days gone AWOL
cast upon Zubenelg gray
i knew it well—
a long, long time ago
"Can you have greater Miracles than these? Men who devote
Their lifes whole comfort to intire scorn & injury & death"
—William Blake, Milton, Plate 23
"Hence the urgent need to disarm its ambush..."
"Our generation’s first revolution may not be in the style of mass protest. It may instead be a spiritual re-orientation away from technology and towards romance, wonder, peace, love, spontaneity, and beauty." —Magazine Non Grata and Marigold via
"My Rome praises, loves, sings out our little books,
At every breast--every hand has me.
Look: someone blushes, pales, is struck, yawns, loathes.
This, I want: now our poems please us."
—Martial 6.60 via
who in the dark hours
has died on the other side
tersehook on the wet street
oligarchs barking
playback singer dies
only glowing red
amidst suffering gray
waiting to cross
the great freeway
you may find yourself
waiting for the asteroid
who in the dark hours
"Oh, when will ignorance be dethroned, and reason and justice reign supreme?"
—Lucy Parsons, letter to the editor, The Socialist, 12/7/1878 via @resistancereborn.bsky.social
A Directory of Formal Poetry Authors.