#poem

kennychaffin@diasp.org

Posterity
by Kenny A. Chaffin
All Rights Reserved © 2023 Kenny A. Chaffin

                                            _“Scarcely anything is known of his life.”_
                                         _- David Trinidad, from‘The Poems _
                                              _Attributed to Him May be by Different Poets’_

Some of his poems seem to have survived,
but attributions are sketchy. So too mine.

Perhaps a future A.I. will scour
the interwebs and identify a few.

Maybe even just one that it deems
worthy. That will be enough.

Kenny A. Chaffin – 9/23/2023

#poem #poetry #literature

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com

WAKING BEAUTY #poem #fairytalereimagined

You saw me, a playing child, laughing amongst the roses.
My shining eyes reflected worlds;
singsong choruses to which I danced proclaimed their glory.
I, a cherub princess, all the doting subjects at my command,
all I asked was their love and beneficence.
Fairies clapped for me, flittered in with luminescent kisses,
fed me on honey, cakes and sweet lilac tea,
whispered me their blessings, giggling and tittering,
watched over me with warm caresses of enchanted nurturing.
I loved easily, laughed whole-heartedly, sang from my soul
happy dance tunes and whimsical madrigals.
There shone radiant magic throughout the land
in the morning of the world.

It was not so easy as I grew.
Word got out, worried whisperings,
that there was a curse upon me.
Those who had seemed so open and friendly
grew distant, masked their faces so I would not call to them,
or became furtively hostile so I would stay away.
I thought it was the power, soon to be mine by succession.
Surely they feared to be too familiar with the potential Queen.
I tried to reassure them, to be warm and familiar, to look for
little ways to please them.
The fairies still played with me, but sometimes turned mean.
They whispered ugly rumours, pinched me and flew away.
They called me fat and ugly and would feed me only thistle and briar.
Then, sometimes, without notice, all would be forgiven, all would be
a madcap party, a whirling swirl of luscious scents and colours,
a warm embrace of magical happiness,
warm and safe and cherished.

I learned to be needy without showing need;
peering sideways into partially opened doors
to see if I could find one safe to enter.
I took to finding little chores that would take me into
unused corners,
bending over so none would look into my face with malice.
I took to wearing common clothing, layered into camouflage.
I took to telling myself that I must indeed be awfully horrid and
worthless to have lost so much and be so reviled.
I took to taking on any sorry chore that would have me
that I might say to the courtiers:
“Look, I am a humble laborer, not worth your attention.”

So I was spinning and pricked my finger, as the curse foretold.
My blood called forth the evil energy to swoop into my open wound.
Unconscious.
Life moving along beyond my senseless form, without my knowledge or input.
Who can tell what may have been done with my unprotesting body.
I was not dead, not appropriate for burial;
still helplessly breathing, metabolizing/catabolizing, inexorably,
yet so slowly, so quietly, so manifestly without power, so easily forgotten.
The wicked ones who would benefit from my demise became old and dust
while I slept.
Those who were false to me acquired many more sins and salvations,
traveling their own rocky roads.
The curse took no notice of time or circumstance.
I existed in a liminal state of vague dream images,
static discharge of random sensory neurons.
I did not expect; I did not wait; I was not aware of being.
Sometimes excruciating nightmares might overtake me;
no matter.
I could neither hear nor utter, but just breathe on
as images vaguely formed and dissipated.

They say there was a malaise over the kingdom.
Work became hard to find and
wandering adventurers moved about the land
hoping to find their fortune.
There was a far off war diminishing the resources
and often intense skirmishes along the borders
increasing fear and bravado.
The once wise and strong ruling family, disrupted in
succession squabbles, had been deposed.
There were no strong rulers, but only petty tyrants,
and not so petty.
The gardens had gone to weeds and brambles.
The fields suffered; sometimes from drought,
sometimes from mildew,
sometimes from marauding scavengers.
Perhaps these were my nightmares come to life.

There was a young prince from a noble but impoverished
family.
He had grown strong and brave, taking in stories of better times.
He had heard the fable of the cursed princess,
sleeping, hidden, once a source of glory and happiness
in a merry and prosperous land.
He had nothing but a dream, to find me.

They say he set out down a road that others had followed.
But where others had met with sorry fates, or become lost,
or defeated by the impenetrability of the twisted trees and brambles,
he found no encumbrance.
There I was, within his reach, so pale and still.
It is said that he wept for joy, took me up into his arms,
whirled me about and kissed me reverently,
infused his buoyant dream into my sleeping form.

I felt the warmth of living moving through me.
I felt safe, exultant, cherished.
My senses slowly revealed themselves,
though true consciousness had not yet returned.

He held me close and danced me into movement,
laughing freely and whispering words of encouragement.
He did not rush me, nor let me feel anything but loving support.
He told me how he had grown up dreaming of finding me,
returning me to my rightful place,
removing the curse upon the land.
“And what, my lady,” he asked, “have you been dreaming all these silent years?”

kennychaffin@diasp.org

Finished Best American Poetry 2023

Much better than the previous anthology IMO

Here is one of the poems I thought outstanding:

And What My Species Did
Elizabeth Willis

A woman who cries is not essential personnel. Salt water conducts her to the brink.

The first sign of illness is a dry mouth. My mouth has been dry for XXX days.

Endless as an ocean. Is. Is not.

That was the day I crossed the railroad to buy the fabric for your shirt. That was when I breathed in the open air and all our chambers.

That was the day the birds appeared from everywhere, cedar waxwings a few feet from my hand. I lived in their habitat. You shared my room. I made a delicious soup. It snowed.

Against the crooked imperfection of the word, this happened. We ate carelessly. I stitched this in the lining of your coat. Essential to whom. Essential to me.

It was not the same stream, it was not America, not the same America, not the same twice. Not the same again.

A hundred times, a hundred days, it was not the same. We crossed the tracks from 6 feet down with the ghost dogs and the deer. We floated off and returned.

This is how we sing as the ship goes down, said my species.

This is what my species said.

This is what we did until indifference left us. This is what we did when we were alive. We rationed what was left. It was Tuesday and then it was not.

This is how we thought in the sweet cool wake of what came next.

from Harpers

Also:

Listening in Deep Space
By Diane Thiel

We've always been out looking for answers,
telling stories about ourselves,
searching for connection, choosing
to send out Stravinsky and whale song,
which, in translation, might very well be
our undoing instead of a welcome.

We launch satellites, probes, telescopes
unfolding like origami, navigating
geomagnetic storms, major disruptions.
Rovers with spirit and perseverance
mapping the unknown. We listen
through large arrays adjusted eagerly

to hear the news that we are not alone.
Considering the history at home,
in houses, across continents, oceans,
even in quests armed with good intentions,
what one seeker has done to another—
what will we do when we find each other?

https://www.poetryoutloud.org/poem/listening-in-deep-space/

#poem #poems #poetry #literature

kennychaffin@diasp.org

Danse Russe
BY WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS

If I when my wife is sleeping
and the baby and Kathleen
are sleeping
and the sun is a flame-white disc
in silken mists
above shining trees,—
if I in my north room
dance naked, grotesquely
before my mirror
waving my shirt round my head
and singing softly to myself:
“I am lonely, lonely.
I was born to be lonely,
I am best so!”
If I admire my arms, my face,
my shoulders, flanks, buttocks
against the yellow drawn shades,—

Who shall say I am not
the happy genius of my household?

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46483/danse-russe?mc_cid=62a3f65c40

#poem #poetry #literature

kennychaffin@diasp.org

Straight, No Chaser
John Keene

In the warm compartment of the 33rd St.
train the quiet catches fire and I light
my mind on thoughts of you and me
on Seventh Avenue where Perry slips
in and Jeeps raced past afternoons
as if on West Street, how any man could
have had me once but you do. Like today
when icy rain paints the Village glass
and I glide down a strip of slick sidewalk
onto Sixth and 9th, a vision of you rising
in me as a landscape of possibility
and though it's freezing and I'm soaked
through it all I still stand there eagerly
on the cement because the gray light
in the winter sky is evening and soon
enough you'll be off and meet me
with your eyes at Journal Square
and later we'll play, two ballers
shadowing each other's moves
this freestyle of loving, our groove.

from Poetry Daily - https://poems.com/poem/straight-no-chaser/
#poem #poetry #literature

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com
  REVISIONS     #poem for my father born September 15, 1923

Let us contradict the hours
And walk awhile amidst the flowered garden of
remembrance.
Times so bittersweet and true
Their precious etchings scarring as they grew
into your essence.
Breathe deep. Look inside your soul
For pack rat hidden magic tones of
carefree, joyous laughter
To salve old wounds with tender care.
Awakening, a new self-awareness emerges after.
Yes, let your inner chorus sing:
We are the source of anything
we wish to make our mission.
The key is to relax and dream,
Floating down a buoyant stream
we're learning to envision.
Through weary hours of bitter nights
It helps if we can fix our sight
upon the rays of morning.
Time is not the enemy,
But more a growing friendship
we are tentatively forming.

https://dreamsjourneys.blogspot.com/2013/03/dreams-and-other-journeys-by-laurie.html

kennychaffin@diasp.org

From IRL
by Tommy Pico

Ppl survive all the time,
thru true horrors Holocaust,
Middle Passage, 1492 like how?
I am one of the weak ones.
I cry at Beyoncé songs.
I see a young mom drunk
on the subway Throw up
blueberries or black beans
n her kid son holds her hand,
waves away strap-hangers,
forgets his happy birthday
candle on the seat The doors
close at their stop I cry
for a straight week.

#poem #poetry #literature

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com

Child of earth #poem

at the heart of human nature is a child
trying to divine what this being human means

Child through time, synecdoche universe,
fiercely at play in our vast ruins
stomping antiquities into sharp shards
to sculpt transcendent mosaic in shifting sands.

a gift to the future

not waiting for life to begin, some designated year,
right now, day to day,
unwinding personal destiny, action and purpose,
racing who knows where,
held in nature's snare,
electrical crashing, thunder caught lightning
aware,
natural child joyfully wild, strikingly there

A child grows
And learns to know
The Norms and Bounds and Social Graces.
Learns to see a world
carefully wrought and framed.
...
[continued]
https://bdelectablemnts.runboard.com/t2664

kennychaffin@diasp.org

90% Right
by Kenny A. Chaffin
All Rights Reserved © 2023 Kenny A. Chaffin

You might say no one knows what it is
but perhaps it’s just that you don’t know
anyone who knows and perhaps
it is just that you don’t know
and someone actually does

Kenny A. Chaffin – 9/13/2023

#poem #poetry #literature

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com

THE PERFECT TREE
#poem

It was a perfect tree, in a perfect forest.
Standing majestic, roots planted deep into the earth,
easily drinking of underground streams.
Basking in magical sunlight.
Wordlessly inhabiting the chemical process of energy.
Enjoying company of other creatures:
Nesting birds, transforming insects,
perhaps even playing host to the occasional human child
climbing amongst its strong, cheerful limbs in happy union.
A perfect tree.
A perfect forest.
Until the urgent need for a shopping mall destroys it all.

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com

#poem one of my personal faves

OR MAYBE CINCINNATI

The crowd dissolves
and I am left in a sad corner
holding a wrinkled overcoat
Wishing for warm holiday homecoming goodwill.
But the endless night enwraps my mind
leaving me twisted
jumping here and there without purpose.

Johnny didn’t have a penny,
but he had good looks and good times
& Mary had her pimp’s abortion to even the score
But no one took the beggar seriously
when he said that times had turned to emptiness.
No one believed in fulfillment;
no one had the time.

& the crowd dissolved
vanished into the fog
tho ectoplasmic energies milled about the mainfare.
It was Thursday in the rain and mist
and sooted brownstones.
And the streetlamps only served as muted halos
like the cafe neon flashing
So I stopped in for another beer and borrowed music
& listened to the couple in the next booth
discuss their barren lives
& thought of 19th century philosophers
who make me sad
& wished for a breezy bright beach in May
& wrote you another letter
to be locked in my diary.

So I’m thinking of splitting for the coast
or maybe Cincinnati
But my overdraft is overdrawn
and I’m not strong enough to hitchhike
and maybe tomorrow just won’t happen
if I can find the right door to oblivion.

But maybe tomorrow will dawn bright and warm
and smiling
and the labor pool will call me
and the coffee buns will be sweet at breaktime
and someone will smile at me
and come to my barstool
to shoot the breeze and share my dreaming
And the crowd will dissolve
And the people will emerge.

kennychaffin@diasp.org

Sheltered Garden
BY H.D.

I have had enough.
I gasp for breath.

Every way ends, every road,
every foot-path leads at last
to the hill-crest—
then you retrace your steps,
or find the same slope on the other side,
precipitate.

I have had enough—
border-pinks, clove-pinks, wax-lilies,
herbs, sweet-cress.

O for some sharp swish of a branch—
there is no scent of resin
in this place,
no taste of bark, of coarse weeds,
aromatic, astringent—
only border on border of scented pinks.

Have you seen fruit under cover
that wanted light—
pears wadded in cloth,
protected from the frost,
melons, almost ripe,
smothered in straw?

Why not let the pears cling
to the empty branch?
All your coaxing will only make
a bitter fruit—
let them cling, ripen of themselves,
test their own worth,
nipped, shrivelled by the frost,
to fall at last but fair
with a russet coat.

Or the melon—
let it bleach yellow
in the winter light,
even tart to the taste—
it is better to taste of frost—
the exquisite frost—
than of wadding and of dead grass.

For this beauty,
beauty without strength,
chokes out life.
I want wind to break,
scatter these pink-stalks,
snap off their spiced heads,
fling them about with dead leaves—
spread the paths with twigs,
limbs broken off,
trail great pine branches,
hurled from some far wood
right across the melon-patch,
break pear and quince—
leave half-trees, torn, twisted
but showing the fight was valiant.

O to blot out this garden
to forget, to find a new beauty
in some terrible
wind-tortured place.

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/48189/sheltered-garden?mc_cid=bb3a01692a

#poem #poetry #literature

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com

UNQUIET RESPONSE
#poem

Is Insanity ever quiet?
Stars burst within confined mind’s
brilliant fire, catching curtains, igniting tapestries.
Scorched odor pervades;
crumbles crumple, a vast array of sand.

She takes his hand, follows vein cliffs
over warm comfort, traces trails of memories
to compassionate embrace.
She was never a rock, craggy and solidly secure.
She was the windswept sea, invited to taste shore.
How dare he wander to sink in sand and fire’s remnants?

“Faith” flickers from mouth to sad, sad eyes.
He is lost.
She feels a scream of unwanted laughter form
like spittle, twisting from dry mouth to flooded eyes.

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com

question of belief #poem

They ast me, you know, do you believe?
I had to say "depends on what you mean"
'cause there's a difference between
that everyday believin;
of all that crap we be receivin'
on tv, at home, on the street, and all
and that biblical stuff they want us to swallow
so they can say it's all God's Plan.
He's the one to service, He's the Man.
When you think you ain't gettin' what yer worth
or have other disputations with yer deal on this Earth,
He's gonna make it all right in the great by and by.
Hosts of Hallalujahing angels in the sky
and all like that. So don't blame fat cats for yer losing case.
Just bow and scrape and count on divine Grace
to save your soul.
Yeah, I believe.
I believe you get what you demand,
with the power of living voices, joining hand in hand
spanning a world in continual
creation.

kennychaffin@diasp.org

frigates that take us lands away
M. NourbeSe Philip

After Emily Dickinson’s “There is no Frigate like a Book”

the small begin of i
in to look
up
all the way
up
the wall of
books that break
the heart of a
child open to love

who does not yet
know desire except
when she desires
cathedrals of words that gather
dust
await the eye
—to see was to love—
hungered on hunger
sweeping across a paginated world
perfected
in misery in
love in words spent with
books and time
algorithms of the
ever in spirit
the extended minute
stretched to
goodbye to
leaved portals
to
the worlds
of other to

forever.

“I fell in love with books as a very young child, when my mother took me to a library for the very first time. The towering stacks—cathedrals of books—filled me with awe and astonishment. I sensed their magic—these frigates, as Emily Dickinson describes them, with their ability to take us away, to places unseen and unknown; to new ideas; to different cultures. The poem becomes its own frigate and suggests that we are all moving inexorably towards something or somewhere else, even if only within ourselves. Perhaps, in the words of Dickinson, to our own ‘Human Soul.’”
—M. NourbeSe Philip

https://mailchi.mp/poets/august-31-2023-poemaday-12137935?e=2706955217

#poem #poetry #literature

sj_ashcroft2@libranet.de

Voyage

Captain, helmsman,
guide your silent barque
along the land-line, next a boundless sea.
Your eyes are fixed upon your nearest goal,
from port to safest port,
along a course
long fixed in fear of chaos in the deep.

“I have no guide!
Clouds have hid the night!”
Yet, longing, you would see your compass blaze;
star fires to point your channel through the waves,
whither life awaits you,
calling homeward;
vague memory of harbours, far away.

Stars’ harmonies;
cloud dissolves in song.
Above you, Captain, see a sky-born hand
show your way across far, shining water,
summoning wind’s fury.
Spin hard the wheel
to take your destined route into the void.

Across ocean,
full sails, masts straining,
useless helm, forced on in Mercy’s stormsurge,
unabating, as black Night commanded.
Stand proud upon your search,
seek vast distance
and unknown harbour, promising full rest.

Captain, helmsman,
roar your ecstasy
with foaming waters crashing on your bow;
passion-torn, your sails still bear you onward,
through night and ocean’s seam
to wider sea,
and onward to your home, in star-flamed love.

© Simon J Ashcroft, 2023

#sjashcroftspoems #poem #Poetry

kennychaffin@diasp.org

A Story About the Body
by Robert Hass

The young composer, working that summer at an artist's colony, had watched her for a week. She was Japanese, a painter, almost sixty, and he thought he was in love with her. He loved her work, and her work was like the way she moved her body, used her hands, looked at him directly when she made amused and considered answers to his questions. One night, walking back from a concert, they came to her door and she turned to him and said, "I think you would like to have me. I would like that too, but I must tell you that I have had a double mastectomy," and when he didn't understand, "I've lost both my breasts." The radiance that he had carried around in his belly and chest cavity—like music—withered very quickly, and he made himself look at her when he said, "I'm sorry. I don't think I could." He walked back to his own cabin through the pines, and in the morning he found a small blue bowl on the porch outside his door. It looked to be full of rose petals, but he found when he picked it up that the rose petals were on top; the rest of the bowl—she must have swept them from the corners of her studio—was full of dead bees.

from the book HUMAN WISHES / Ecco Press

https://mailchi.mp/poems/todays-poem-a-story-about-the-body-by-robert-hass-6077516?e=6ec42bce63

#poem #poetry #literature

kennychaffin@diasp.org

"If she had indeed written her own poems, then this would demonstrate that Africans were human beings and should be liberated from slavery. If, on the other hand, she had not written, or could not write her poems, or if indeed she was like a parrot who speaks a few words plainly, then that would be another matter entirely," Henry Louis Gates Jr. explained. "Essentially, she was auditioning for the humanity of the entire African people."

https://link.lithub.com/view/602ea77d180f243d6532f731jcvto.59z/a8aea195

enter image description here

#poem #poetry #literature #books