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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
~ Robert Pinsky
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Sunday, 31. December 2006

Bird Signs



Walking around in a slight drizzle at dusk, the eyes see a very large woodpecker, one that he had read about* but had never before seen on his orinthological hikes, hopping from tree trunk to tree trunk, in the search for something, perhaps dinner or perhaps a hole to spend the rainy night.

After an afternoon and evening spent re-reading short novels by The Great Russians (Tolstoy's "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" and Dostoyevsky's "White Nights"), the sharp call and the shape of this bird had him trembling in anticipation; a strange sign that, perhaps, stands for something that he might discover and unravel in the year ahead.

* Most recently in a National Geographic's story "The Ghost Bird"




My Daily Notes

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Music Heard in Illness - Franz Wright



“Everything changes but the avant-garde.” —Paul Valéry

A few words are left us from the beginning. Thank you, God, for allowing me a little to think again this morning.

Touch my face, touch this scarred heart.

Here, touch this upturned face as wind as light.

So they labored for three or four decades to turn the perfectly harmless word quietude into a pejorative sneer.

Call no man happy until he has passed, beyond pain, the boundary of this life.

We were standing alone at the window when it started to rain and Schumann quietly.

That imbecilic plastic hive of evil—

To

night, and you turned

and said, although you were not there, Night.

What do we know but this world.

And although I could not speak, I answered.

Note: Borrowed from the Ploughshares's Winter 2006-2007 issue, this poem perfectly bookends an year that began with this translation of a song, which was this year's first post.

To the few readers (and blogging friends) who scan this blog from time to time, my best wishes and joy to you at the turn of a year. Keep on answering even if you can't speak.




Big Book Of Poetry

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Caesura - Reflections At A Year's End



This year, nearly at its end, has been like a caesura in my life, the gap between the saying of one line and the next unsaid line; a caesura of 365 days. At the end of the previous year, you see, I felt that I had the world in the palm of my hand, everything was sewed up, all the plans were falling into place, my Titanic was pointed exactly towards that compass’s quadrant, in whose direction various New Worlds (of new work, new place of living, new life entwined emotionally, artistically, and intellectually with the other’s) awaited my arrival.

But things started going seriously wrong with this package deal (which I had so ardently desired, and cheered for at the end of the previous year on getting it) right from the beginning with the soul registering the first signs of the seismic disturbances to come, right about in January. And by the middle of the year, as winter gave way to spring, and spring to summer, the sinking was done. One needs more than a paper boat of dreams to sail the sea of time; the kneel and the nave of such a boat requires true bones and real sinew. So I kneeled over, I fell down, air and shit beaten out of me, a foolish Icarus somersaulting from the stage of his imagination, mainly set up as a quite room with two people in it reading and writing amiably, beating on his flaming wax wings, into a messy dump of books and blankness.

Meanwhile, I have watched the days wheel past by me like a nearly comatose fish in a fishbowl from which nearly all oxygen has been sucked out, which stares with a glassy eye at the passerby, and the days with their cargo of changing light as it comes through the trees, marriages and divorces of friends, births and deaths, the static crackling of distant wars (geographical, political, and personal), the unbearable kindnesses received from near strangers, and the acts that one must do to simply live starting with wheezed breathing. These were in the words of a Joan Baez’s song, the days of poisoned memory, of diamonds and rust, mainly rust. But they are now done.

Now the morning’s drizzle has turned into a hard rain, the sound of water masking the rush of thoughts and ruminations. Now I must sit quietly for an hour or so, eyes closed, simply breathing. And soon it will be time, under a new numeral, with new ground under my feet, to begin again, to say the still unsaid lines I have been given to say, after this long caesura of a year.




My Daily Notes

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