Monday, October 1, 2018

Trojan Poetry 95 : The B-52s and Dadaism: Planet Claire




Planet Claire
by The B-52's

She came from Planet Claire
I knew she came from there
She drove a Plymouth Satellite
A-faster than the speed of light
Planet Claire has pink air
All the trees are red
No one ever dies there
No one has a head
Some say she's from Mars
Or one of the seven stars that shine after three-thirty in the morning
Well, she isn't!
She came from Planet Claire
She came from Planet Claire
She came from Planet Claire

Songwriters: Henry Mancini / Kate Pierson / Fred Schneider / Keith Strickland / Cindy Wilson / Ricky Wilson
Planet Claire lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Universal Music Publishing Group, Spirit Music Group, Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., 401k Music Inc

Interview with Fred Schneider: https://bbook.com/arts-culture/blackbook-interview-the-b-52s-fred-schneider-on-40-years-of-making-surreal-music/

MOMA article: https://www.moma.org/learn/moma_learning/themes/dada/word-play

Monday, September 17, 2018

Trojan Poetry 94: "Water-Strider" by Aaron Baker




Water-Strider
By Aaron Baker


Though winged, he walks
                on water.
Skates between elements,
skitters like thought
                through the cattails.
A snake slips unseen through the underbrush.
The forest shifts and sighs, once again
          won't speak its secret.
Between the trees, my father glides
through sunlight, then shadow.
          Surface tension:
the strider rows forward
with middle legs, steers with back legs,
              grasps with forelegs the insect
on which he feeds.
Leaning into my reflection,
              my arched body is the fulcrum on which
all of this turns. The sun hollows the air, burns
it of all but the most essential sound.
Mud-slurp and leaf-stir.
And there, a contrail over the Cascades, the quick
     stroke of a master's hand,
and through the high hush, the vessel itself
   an insect-spark
        on the burnt-in blue.


From Posthumous Noon
Gunpowder Press
http://gunpowderpress.com/
Selected by Jane Hirshfield
as winner of the 2017
Barry Spacks Poetry Prize

Monday, September 10, 2018

Trojan Poetry 93: "What you cannot hold" by Rilke and "Keeping Things Whole" by Mark Strand


What you cannot hold
by Rainer Maria Rilke
Translated by Paula Modersohn-Becker

You who let yourselves feel: enter the breathing
that is more than your own.
Let it brush your cheeks
as it divides and rejoins behind you.

Blessed ones, whole ones,
you where the heart begins:
You are the bow that shoots the arrows
and you are the target.

Fear not the pain. Let its weight fall back
into the earth;
for heavy are the mountains, heavy the seas.

The trees you planted in childhood have grown
too heavy. You cannot bring them along.
Give yourselves to the air, to what you cannot hold.


Keeping Things Whole
By Mark Strand

In a field
I am the absence
of field.
This is
always the case.
Wherever I am
I am what is missing.

When I walk
I part the air
and always
the air moves in 
to fill the spaces
where my body’s been.

We all have reasons
for moving.
I move
to keep things whole.

Monday, August 27, 2018

Trojan Poetry 92: "End of Summer" by Stanley Kunitz and "Hello Sunshine" by Aretha Franklin






End of Summer
By Stanley Kunitz

An agitation of the air,
A perturbation of the light
Admonished me the unloved year
Would turn on its hinge that night.

I stood in the disenchanted field
Amid the stubble and the stones,
Amazed, while a small worm lisped to me
The song of my marrow-bones.

Blue poured into summer blue,
A hawk broke from his cloudless tower,
The roof of the silo blazed, and I knew
That part of my life was over.

Already the iron door of the north
Clangs open: birds, leaves, snows
Order their populations forth,
And a cruel wind blows.

Stanley Kunitz, "End of Summer" from The Collected Poems of Stanley Kunitz. Copyright © 1953 by Stanley Kunitz.

Trojan Poetry 91: "16 Stanzas in February" By Talvikki Ansel




16 Stanzas in February
By Talvikki Ansel

The cow pasture and starlings
that settle all at once like a blanket,
dark raisins over the cows' heads,
*
lone goose, flying down river
third violin, does it hope to catch up

*
did it not notice the gathering,
others heaving themselves from the pond?

*
third violin in the shadow of
the violas, who would like to be a viola

*
rich-voiced as a blue-tick coonhound.

*
In February, sun edges the tree trunks
like a talent still to show itself,
maybe the third violin would slide into
the seconds,

*
the adolescent in "Personal Use Typing"
realize she could slow down and make no mistakes,

*
an acceptable skill
for the world of work.

*
When a new chicken was introduced
she was first boss of the flock but now they all
get along: scrutinize my boots,
mittened hand reaching into the grain pail,
*
the radius of a white bowl.

*
To see them together is to forget
one was the boss, one ate a mouse,
one was intent on finding seeds

*
in the curved wrists of the maple roots.

*
The latch on the front door opens
as you bring in firewood, blows open
the back door

*
sends cats up the walls of the mudroom
to cling to the shelf
with its faded bottle of soap bubbles,

*
an empty wand, frozen, open-mouthed,

*
March, all that deceptive light
but no fruits yet.

From
FIELD
Spring 2018
http://www2.oberlin.edu/ocpress/

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Trojan Poetry 90: "Privet" by Simon Armitage



Privet
by Simon Armitage

Because I’d done wrong I was sent to hell,
down black steps to the airless tombs
of mothballed contraptions and broken tools.
Piled on a shelf every daffodil bulb
was an animal skull or shrunken head,
every drawer a seed-tray of mildew and rust.
In its alcove shrine a bottle of meths
stood corked and purple like a pickled saint.
I inched ahead, pushed the door of the furthest crypt
where starlight broke in through shuttered vents
and there were the shears, balanced on two nails,
hanging cruciform on the white-washed wall.
And because I’d done wrong I was sent
to the end of the garden to cut the hedge,
that dividing line between moor and lawn
gone haywire that summer, all stem and stalk
where there should have been contour and form.
The shears were a crude beast, lumpen, pre-war,
rolling-pin handles on iron-age swords,
an oiled rivet that rolled like a slow eye,
jaws that opened to the tips of its wings
then closed with an executioner’s lisp.
I snipped and prodded at first, pecked at strands,
then cropped and hacked watching spiders scuttle
for tunnels and bolt-holes of woven silk,
and found further in an abandoned nest
like a begging bowl or a pauper’s wreath,
till two hours on the hedge stood scalped
and fleeced, raw-looking, stripped of its green,
my hands blistered, my feet in a litter
of broken arrows and arrowhead leaves.
He came from the house to inspect the work,
didn’t speak, ran his eye over the levelled crown
and the shorn flanks. Then for no reason except
for the sense that comes from doing a thing
for its own sake, he lifted me up in his arms
and laid me down on the top of the hedge,
just lowered me onto that bed of twigs,
and I floated there, cushioned and buoyed
by a million matchwood fingertips,
held by nothing but needling spokes and spikes,
released to the universe, buried in sky.

https://www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/public/privet-armitage/

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Trojan Poetry 89: "Dear Skull" by Emily Van Kley, Bjork, and Georgia O'Keefe




Bjork: Triumph of a Heart Lyrics Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoOhqSllnCc

Bjork: Triumph of a Heart Official Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvgVsxaqYgA

Dear Skull
by Emily Van Kley

beloved braincase, body’s bleeding heart
helmet law

dear ribs thick with implied meat, disused central
railroad, reverse spec house unplumbed
to propitious frame

dear double-strung forearm, dear violin bow,

dear pachyderm-eared pelvis,

dear barnacle spine—

tolerate this animate interlude, nervous tic of cell & swoosh,
elasticity & vein

& you’ll emerge, democratically beautiful,

armature to nothing

you’ll make the case for stasis, grow
each year more ravishingly still

yes, the flesh is weak,
but you are forged of patience,

ill inclined to cheer or mourn
the extraneous

—respiration, cartilage—as it trundles away