As Kingfishers Catch Fire by Gerard Manley Hopkins
As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame; As tumbled over rim in roundy wells Stones ring; like each tucked string tells, each hung bell's Bow swung finds tongue to fling out broad its name; Each mortal thing does one thing and the same: Deals out that being indoors each one dwells; Selves — goes itself; myself it speaks and spells, Crying Whát I dó is me: for that I came.
I say móre: the just man justices; Keeps grace: thát keeps all his goings graces; Acts in God's eye what in God's eye he is — Chríst — for Christ plays in ten thousand places, Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his To the Father through the features of men's faces.
Today’s poem was taken from Gerard Manley Hopkins: Poems and Prose, which was published by Penguin Classics in 1985 and is available to purchase wherever books are sold.
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Resting on the Ground with My Love in the Rattlesnake Habitat by Alice Lyons
She pronounces Chama the name of the milky green river with a richness in the ch I cannot muster, puts a hard d on the end of her ands. anD. anD. anD. Like the river she is asking to be endless anD shifting. To stream. I’d scouted the knoll of oaks for rattlers, being beyond the bounds of Coverage having no means to learn their habits. So I lay down with her on the ground. Their ground. AnD I willed to forget the cares of my later-in-life job search. Job. Which is also Job, a man in the Bible. Which is a book. The oaks of the knoll were leaning into the Chama like girls washing their hair in basins. I thought of EB shampooing Lota, of Frost’s birches, of Plath’s Wych elms which I’d like to have googled. Did snakes favor oak knolls? Did Georgia O’Keeffe worry about health insurance costs in Abiquiú? AnD beside me my love streaming, her poodles distantly nosing the chamisa. Standards. I thought I had them. Put art at the front of the queue wych is different from quiú. AnD now this. Biblical the proportions of this breaking-back-into-a-country-I’d- locked-myself-out-of phase. Was it scenic? I liked the pachysandra, branches of oak taking all that space from the sky. But then everybody disappeared to their offices. Three times I wrote work work work when woke was what I wanted to write. Miniature is the acorn I fingered in the soft flour-sack pocket of my jeans. Acorn smaller than East Coast or indeed Irish Oak varieties wych she handed me anD how hungrily I pocketed its little body.
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All Wild Animals Were Once Called Deer by Brigit Pegeen Kelly
Some truck was gunning the night before up Pippin Hill's steep grade And the doe was thrown wide. This happened five years ago now, Or six. She must have come out of the woods by Simpson's red trailer— The one that looks like a faded train car—and the driver Did not see her. His brakes no good. Or perhaps she hit the truck. That happens, too. A figure swims up from nowhere, a flying figure That seems to be made of nothing more than moonlight, or vapor, Until it slams its face, solid as stone, against the glass. And maybe when this happens the driver gets out. Maybe not. Strange about the kills we get without intending them. Because we are pointed in the direction of something. Because we are distracted at just the right moment, or the wrong. We were waiting for the school bus. It was early, but not yet light. We watched the darkness draining off like the last residue Of water from a tub. And we didn't speak, because that was our way. High up a plane droned, drone of the cold, and behind us the flag In front of the Bank of Hope's branch trailer snapped and popped in the wind. It sounded like a boy whipping a wet towel against a thigh Or like the stiff beating of a swan's wings as it takes off From the lake, a flat drumming sound, the sound of something Being pounded until it softens, and then—as the wind lowered And the flag ran out wide—there was a second sound, the sound of running fire. And there was the scraping, too, the sad knife-against-skin scraping Of the acres of field corn strung out in straggling rows Around the branch trailer that had been, the winter before, our town's claim to fame When, in the space of two weeks, it was successfully robbed twice. The same man did it both times, in the same manner. He had a black hood and a gun, and he was so polite That the embarrassed teller couldn't hide her smile when he showed up again. They didn't think it could happen twice. But sometimes it does. Strange about that. Lightning strikes and strikes again. My piano teacher watched her husband, who had been struck as a boy, Fall for good, years later, when he was hit again. He was walking across a cut corn field toward her, stepping over The dead stalks, holding the bag of nails he'd picked up at the hardware store Out like a bouquet. It was drizzling so he had his umbrella up. There was no thunder, nothing to be afraid of. And then a single bolt from nowhere, and for a moment the man Was doing a little dance in a movie, a jig, three steps or four, Before he dropped like a cloth, or a felled bird. This happened twenty years ago now, but my teacher keeps Telling me the story. She hums while she plays. And we were humming That morning by the bus stop. A song about boys and war. And the thing about the doe was this. She looked alive. As anything will in the half light. As lawn statues will. I was going to say as even children playing a game of statues will, But of course they are alive. Though sometimes A person pretending to be a statue seems farther gone in death Than a statue does. Or to put it another way, Death seems to be the living thing, the thing The thing that looks out through the eyes. Strange about that . . . We stared at the doe for a long time and I thought about the way A hunter slits a deer's belly. I've watched this many times. And the motion is a deft one. It is the same motion the swan uses When he knifes the children down by his pond on Wasigan Road. They put out a hand. And quick as lit grease, the swan's Boneless neck snakes around in a sideways circle, driving The bill hard toward the softest spot . . . All those songs We sing about swans, but they are mean. And up close, often ugly. That old Wasigan bird is a smelly, moth-eaten thing. His wings stained yellow as if he chewed tobacco, His upper bill broken from his foul-tempered strikes. And he is awkward, too, out of the water. Broken-billed and gaited. When he grapples down the steep slope, wheezing and spitting, He looks like some old man recovering from hip surgery, Slowly slapping down one cursed flat foot, then the next. But the thing about the swan is this. The swan is made for the water. You can't judge him out of it. He's made for the chapter In the rushes. He's like one of those small planes my brother flies. Ridiculous things. Something a boy dreams up late at night While he stares at the stars. Something a child draws. I've watched my brother take off a thousand times, and it's always The same. The engine spits and dies, spits and catches— A spurting match—and the machine shakes and shakes as if it were Stuck together with glue and wound up with a rubber band. It shimmies the whole way down the strip, past the pond Past the wind bagging the goose-necked wind sock, past the banks Of bright red and blue planes. And as it climbs slowly Into the air, wobbling from side to side, cautious as a rock climber, Putting one hand forward then the next, not even looking At the high spot above the tree line that is the question, It seems that nothing will keep it up, not a wish, not a dare, Not the proffered flowers of our held breath. It seems As if the plane is a prey the hunter has lined up in his sights, His finger pressing against the cold metal, the taste of blood On his tongue . . . but then, at the dizzying height Of our dismay, just before the sky goes black, The climber's frail hand reaches up and grasps the highest rock, Hauling, with a last shudder, the body over, The gun lowers, and perfectly poised now, high above The dark pines, the plane is home free. It owns it all, all. My brother looks down and counts his possessions, Strip and grass, the child's cemetery the black tombstones Of the cedars make on the grassy hill, the wind-scrubbed Face of the pond, the swan's white stone . . . In thirty years, roughly, we will all be dead . . . That is one thing . . . And you can't judge the swan out of the water . . . That is another. The swan is mean and ugly, stupid as stone, But when it finally makes its way down the slope, over rocks And weeds, through the razory grasses of the muddy shallows, The water fanning out in loose circles around it And then stilling, when it finally reaches the deepest spot And raises in slow motion its perfectly articulated wings, Wings of smoke, wings of air, then everything changes. Out of the shallows, the lovers emerge, sword and flame, And over the pond's lone island the willow spills its canopy, A shifting feast of gold and green, a spell of lethal beauty. O bird of moonlight. O bird of wish. O sound rising Like an echo from the water. Grief sound. Sound of the horn. The same ghostly sound the deer makes when it runs Through the woods at night, white lightning through the trees, Through the coldest moments, when it feels as if the earth Will never again grow warm, lover running toward lover, The branches tearing back, the mouth and eyes wide, The heart flying into the arms of the one that will kill her.
Thanks as always for being a faithful reader of The Voracious Bibliophile. If you like what you see, please like, comment, follow, and subscribe to my email list to get notified of new posts as soon as they drop. You can also email me at fred.slusher@thevoraciousbibliophile.com or catch me on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest @voraciousbiblog. Keep reading the world, one page (or pixel) at a time.
Their bells replaced by tins they rattle, the city’s lepers don’t mean to warn but in your face seek the metal you think they’re worth. For once, for some moments, as I drop my ransom and make my getaway — it’s a street that housed the port’s warehouses once — I hear bells from Surat ringing an evening’s close, the murmur of crowds dispersing, watch the harbour’s torches light up a quay I never stepped on and a grandfather I never met, his eye on his watch, just beginning to know how little it takes for a day to be extinguished, how long for bells to make us believe it has gone.
Thanks as always for being a faithful reader of The Voracious Bibliophile. If you like what you see, please like, comment, follow, and subscribe to my email list to get notified of new posts as soon as they drop. You can also email me at fred.slusher@thevoraciousbibliophile.com or catch me on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest @voraciousbiblog. Keep reading the world, one page (or pixel) at a time.
Thanks as always for being a faithful reader of The Voracious Bibliophile. If you like what you see, please like, comment, follow, and subscribe to my email list to get notified of new posts as soon as they drop. You can also email me at fred.slusher@thevoraciousbibliophile.com or catch me on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest @voraciousbiblog. Keep reading the world, one page (or pixel) at a time.
i hold onto the way the air feels in october it brings out the best in me unlike the violating heat of august that fills the space between the dirt and the heavens only a handful of moons prior to the golden treetops and the ritualistic pumpkin and maple that stir our hearts and reveal our need for stupid, cheery things
the earth is falling asleep lying its head to rest in the fading foliage on the ground folding up the day into smaller and smaller glimpses of light but here i am bathing in the soft wind here i am grinning in a grey sweater here i am waking up
Thanks as always for being a faithful reader of The Voracious Bibliophile. If you like what you see, please like, comment, follow, and subscribe to my email list to get notified of new posts as soon as they drop. You can also email me at fred.slusher@thevoraciousbibliophile.com or catch me on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest @voraciousbiblog. Keep reading the world, one page (or pixel) at a time.
On February 7, 1979, Pluto crossed over Neptune’s orbit and became the eighth planet from the sun for twenty years. A study in 1988 determined that Pluto’s path of orbit could never be accurately predicted. Labeled as “chaotic,” Pluto was later discredited from planet status in 2006.
Today, I broke your solar system. Oops. My bad. Your graph said I was supposed to make a nice little loop around the sun.
Naw.
I chaos like a motherfucker. Ain’t no one can chart me. All the other planets, they think I’m annoying. They think I’m an escaped moon, running free.
Fuck your moon. Fuck your solar system. Fuck your time. Your year? Your year ain’t shit but a day to me. I could spend your whole year turning the winds in my bed. Thinking about rings and how Jupiter should just pussy on up and marry me by now. Your day?
That’s an asswipe. A sniffle. Your whole day is barely the start of my sunset.
My name means hell, bitch. I am hell, bitch. All the cold you have yet to feel. Chaos like a motherfucker. And you tried to order me. Called me ninth. Somewhere in the mess of graphs and math and compass you tried to make me follow rules. Rules? Fuck your rules. Neptune, that bitch slow. And I deserve all the sun I can get, and all the blue-gold sky I want around me.
It is February 7th, 1979 and my skin is more copper than any sky will ever be. More metal. Neptune is bitch-sobbing in my rearview, and I got my running shoes on and all this sky that’s all mine.
Fuck your order. Fuck your time. I realigned the cosmos. I chaosed all the hell you have yet to feel. Now all your kids in the classrooms, they confused. All their clocks: wrong. They don’t even know what the fuck to do. They gotta memorize new songs and shit. And the other planets, I fucked their orbits. I shook the sky. Chaos like a motherfucker.
It is February 7th, 1979. The sky is blue-gold: the freedom of possibility.
“Pluto Shits on the Universe” is now probably in my top ten favorite poems of all time. I love Asghar’s irreverence here, the way she plays with the multiple meanings of certain words. Consider this part of the poem:
My name means hell, bitch. I am hell, bitch. All the cold you have yet to feel. Chaos like a motherfucker. And you tried to order me. Called me ninth.
Order here conveys certain ideas singularly and in conjunction with one another:
Order as “a state in which everything is in its correct or appropriate place”.*
Order as “the arrangement or disposition of people or things in relation to each other according to a particular sequence, pattern, or method”.”
Order as “an authoritative command, direction, or instruction”.*
Order as the opposite of Chaos, in Chaos Theory, which is “an interdisciplinary theory and branch of mathematics focusing on the study of chaos: dynamical systems whose apparently random states of disorder and irregularities are actually governed by underlying patterns and deterministic laws that are highly sensitive to initial conditions”.**
*Definition taken from Oxford Languages
**Definition taken from Wikipedia
There is the forced classification, the imposition of hierarchies, the reification of unnatural (human-made) systems, and the stark dismissal of them all.
Chaos like a motherfucker. / And you tried to order me. Called me ninth. There is an acknowledgment of the would-be controlling outside power and its unequivocal rejection. There is the forced classification, the imposition of hierarchies, the reification of unnatural (human-made) systems, and the stark dismissal of them all.
Today, I broke your solar system. Oops. My bad. Y’all. That slaps.
Fatimah Asghar Recites Her Poem, “Pluto Shits on the Universe”
You can learn more about Fatimah Asghar and her work at her website. Her debut poetry collection, If They Come for Us: Poems, was published by One World in August 2018 and is available to purchase wherever books are sold.
Thanks as always for being a faithful reader of The Voracious Bibliophile. If you like what you see, please like, comment, follow, and subscribe to my email list to get notified of new posts as soon as they drop. You can also email me at fred.slusher@thevoraciousbibliophile.com or catch me on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest @voraciousbiblog. Keep reading the world, one page (or pixel) at a time.
Hymn to Intellectual Beauty by Percy Bysshe Shelley
The awful shadow of some unseen Power Floats though unseen among us; visiting This various world with as inconstant wing As summer winds that creep from flower to flower; Like moonbeams that behind some piny mountain shower, It visits with inconstant glance Each human heart and countenance; Like hues and harmonies of evening, Like clouds in starlight widely spread, Like memory of music fled, Like aught that for its grace may be Dear, and yet dearer for its mystery.
Spirit of BEAUTY, that dost consecrate With thine own hues all thou dost shine upon Of human thought or form, where art thou gone? Why dost thou pass away and leave our state, This dim vast vale of tears, vacant and desolate? Ask why the sunlight not for ever Weaves rainbows o'er yon mountain-river, Why aught should fail and fade that once is shown, Why fear and dream and death and birth Cast on the daylight of this earth Such gloom, why man has such a scope For love and hate, despondency and hope?
No voice from some sublimer world hath ever To sage or poet these responses given: Therefore the names of Demon, Ghost, and Heaven, Remain the records of their vain endeavour: Frail spells whose utter'd charm might not avail to sever, From all we hear and all we see, Doubt, chance and mutability. Thy light alone like mist o'er mountains driven, Or music by the night-wind sent Through strings of some still instrument, Or moonlight on a midnight stream, Gives grace and truth to life's unquiet dream.
Love, Hope, and Self-esteem, like clouds depart And come, for some uncertain moments lent. Man were immortal and omnipotent, Didst thou, unknown and awful as thou art, Keep with thy glorious train firm state within his heart. Thou messenger of sympathies, That wax and wane in lovers' eyes; Thou, that to human thought art nourishment, Like darkness to a dying flame! Depart not as thy shadow came, Depart not—lest the grave should be, Like life and fear, a dark reality.
While yet a boy I sought for ghosts, and sped Through many a listening chamber, cave and ruin, And starlight wood, with fearful steps pursuing Hopes of high talk with the departed dead. I call'd on poisonous names with which our youth is fed; I was not heard; I saw them not; When musing deeply on the lot Of life, at that sweet time when winds are wooing All vital things that wake to bring News of birds and blossoming, Sudden, thy shadow fell on me; I shriek'd, and clasp'd my hands in ecstasy!
I vow'd that I would dedicate my powers To thee and thine: have I not kept the vow? With beating heart and streaming eyes, even now I call the phantoms of a thousand hours Each from his voiceless grave: they have in vision'd bowers Of studious zeal or love's delight Outwatch'd with me the envious night: They know that never joy illum'd my brow Unlink'd with hope that thou wouldst free This world from its dark slavery, That thou, O awful LOVELINESS, Wouldst give whate'er these words cannot express.
The day becomes more solemn and serene When noon is past; there is a harmony In autumn, and a lustre in its sky, Which through the summer is not heard or seen, As if it could not be, as if it had not been! Thus let thy power, which like the truth Of nature on my passive youth Descended, to my onward life supply Its calm, to one who worships thee, And every form containing thee, Whom, SPIRIT fair, thy spells did bind To fear himself, and love all human kind.
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All night I dreamed of my home, of the roads that are so long and straight they die in the middle— among the spines of elderly weeds on either side, among the dead cats, the ants who are all eyes, the suitcase thrown open, sprouting failures.
2. And this evening in the garden I find the winter inside a snail shell, rigid and cool, a little stubborn temple, its one visitor gone.
3. If there were messages or signs, I might hear now a voice tell me to walk forever, to ask the mold for pardon, and one by one I would hear out my sins, hear they are not important—that I am part of this rain drumming its long fingers, and of the roadside stone refusing to blink, and of the coyote nailed to the fence with its long grin.
And when there are no messages the dead lie still— their hands crossed so strangely like knives and forks after supper.
4. I stay up late listening. My feet tap the floor, they begin a tiny dance which will outlive me. They turn away from this poem. It is almost Spring.
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An end is always punishment for a beginning. If you’re Catholic, sadness is punishment for happiness, you become the bug you squash if you’re Hindu, a flinty space opens in your head after a long night of laughter and wine. For waking there are dreams, from French poetry, English poetry, for light fire although sometimes fire must be punished by light which is why psychotherapy had to be invented. A father may say nothing to a son for years. A wife may keep something small folded deep in her underwear drawer. Clouds come in resembling the terrible things we believe about ourselves, a rock comes loose from a ledge, the baby just cries and cries. Doll in a chair, windshield wipers, staring off into the city lights. For years you may be unable to hear the word monkey without a stab in the heart because she called you that the summer she thought she loved you and you thought you loved someone else and everyone loved your salad dressing. And the daffodils come up in the spring and the snow covers the road in winter and the water covers the deep trenches in the sea where all the time the inner stuff of this earth surges up which is how the continents are made and broken.
Thanks as always for being a faithful reader of The Voracious Bibliophile. If you like what you see, please like, comment, follow, and subscribe to my email list to get notified of new posts as soon as they drop. You can also email me at fred.slusher@thevoraciousbibliophile.com or catch me on Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, and Pinterest @voraciousbiblog. Keep reading the world, one page (or pixel) at a time.