Dark Age

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
A man leads children into waters teeming 
with bacteria. Because they are splashing
and swimming, most likely they will swallow
some water. No one is sure if milk is safe
to drink anymore; if birds will begin to fall
down dead, straight out of the sky; or a hundred
canaries choke on toxic gases in the coal mines.
You visit the zoo and the cages are verdigrised
and empty. Where did the moon go? The whine
of sirens rises in the distance, as planes
roll onto their sides and dust coats bodies
in the desert, stacked like mortar stone.

Reckoning

Sam Pepys and me

At the office all morning. Dined at home alone, my wife being sick of her Mois in bed. Then to walk to Pauls churchyard, and there evened all reckonings to this day. So back to the office and so home. And Will Joyce came with a friend, a Cosen of his, to see me and I made them drink a bottle of wine; and so to sing and read and to bed.

at the office or at home
on reckoning day

will joy seem mad
in a bottle of dread


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 13 May 1662.

Short History of Medicine, with Whale Hotel

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Even the bodies of gods needed 
tending— their wounds after lightning
strikes or war, their cursed organs
shredded night after night then made
whole in the morning. But they had some
unfair advantages. Blood from the right
side of a Gorgon to bring back the dead.
Ichor in their veins, nectar and bread
of ambrosia served up by doves whenever
they sat to eat. We, on the other hand,
must submit to the eternal probing
of healers just as mortal and flawed
as we are. They cupped our blood
with leeches then with lancets, numbed
our flesh before any opening could become
a window into the interior. How much more
do they know about the mysteries of blood,
marrow, bone? We have gleaming hospitals,
antihistamines, radiation and ion beam
therapies; vaccines for measles and flu
but not yet the common cold. Not so long
ago, in 1899, rheumatism sufferers
were rowed out to wherever a whale
had died. Whalers cut out narrow
plots in the carcass and patients lay
for two hours in a bath of exposed
blubber. It was believed this moist
poultice enveloping the entire body
would pull out all its inflammations.

Poetry Blog Digest 2025, Week 19

Poetry Blogging Network

A personal selection of posts from the Poetry Blogging Network and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the blog digest archive at Via Negativa or, if you’d like it in your inbox, subscribe on Substack (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).

This week: night-flowering catch-fly, the formal narrative epithalamium, a crayon sky, rage fatigue, and much more. Enjoy.

Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2025, Week 19”

Beauty spot

Sam Pepys and me

Mr. Townsend called us up by four o’clock; and by five the three ladies, my wife and I, and Mr. Townsend, his son and daughter, were got to the barge and set out. We walked from Mortlake to Richmond, and so to boat again. And from Teddington to Hampton Court Mr. Townsend and I walked again. And then met the ladies, and were showed the whole house by Mr. Marriott; which is indeed nobly furnished, particularly the Queen’s bed, given her by the States of Holland; a looking-glass sent by the Queen-mother from France, hanging in the Queen’s chamber, and many brave pictures.
So to Mr. Marriott’s, and there we rested ourselves and drank. And so to barge again, and there we had good victuals and wine, and were very merry; and got home about eight at night very well. So my wife and I took leave of my Ladies, and home by a hackney-coach, the easiest that ever I met with, and so to bed.

we go to the lake
to walk
in a looking-glass

the mother
in the wine
my wife and me


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 12 May 1662.

Big Day: a bird list in haiku

The bird ID app Merlin kept urging me to participate in Global Big Day on Saturday, as I was walking in the Thickhead Wild Area near Boalsburg, PA. I finally decided to try to write a modern haiku for each bird I heard or saw. I failed, of course, but here are the passable efforts.

black-throated
blue warbling
here here HERE

ovenbird
the silence must be preserved
for a dome of leaves

wheezing pine
a black-and-white warbler’s
elegant stripes

giddy with
some sun-flooded bush
hooded warbler

mossy trail
a black-throated green warbler
dreaming out loud

last year’s leaves
still worth a rummage
eastern towhee

scratching an itch
without a pause in the song
chestnut-sided warbler

twisted limbs
the witchedy call of a common
yellowthroat

mourning dove
the dead oak encircled
by whispering birches

passing
a chickadee’s inspection
doddering birch stump

one monologue
leads to another
red-eyed vireos

tanager
husky-voiced singer
in scarlet

hairy woodpecker
the sun beginning to beat
on my neck

the buzz
of blossoming treetops
cerulean warbler

yellow warbler
the rhododendron’s one
yellow leaf

songs without birds
the brown thrasher’s
vast catalogue

blowdown calling
an American redstart back
from Venezuela

tufted titmouse
the hectoring tone
of my hunger

wood thrush
all the sweetness of time
flown by

Thickhead Wild Area, Rothrock State Forest
May 10, 2025 – Global Big Day

Apparition as Object of Investigation

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
"We look at the world once, in childhood.
The rest is memory."
~ Louise Glück



It's true, everything was undiluted,
intense; often, sudden as a stroke

left by a blade of grass as you passed,
but which you were only conscious of

as a bloom of dried blood inside
your palm after you arrived

at the house. Now you really want
to know what happened that night—

You were not yet three; all you have
are fragments: the scumbled memories

of others. Imagine plates on the table,
from which your parents have eaten;

and another for a guest who comes
each Friday to visit your mother.

But on this night, this friend has poured
rat poison into her coffee. Did she wait

until someone left the room before
pushing her lips over the edge of this

well and drink, to the dregs? Every
aspect of the world comes with a haunting.

In that interlude between spring and summer,
for instance— when you walk up the steps,

a drift of faint fragrance descends
from trees not even in flower.

Lethargic

Sam Pepys and me

(Lord’s day). To our church in the morning, where, our Minister being out of town, a dull, flat Presbiter preached. Dined at home, and my wife’s brother with us, we having a good dish of stewed beef of Jane’s own dressing, which was well done, and a piece of sturgeon of a barrel sent me by Captain Cocke. In the afternoon to White Hall; and there walked an hour or two in the Park, where I saw the King now out of mourning, in a suit laced with gold and silver, which it was said was out of fashion. Thence to the Wardrobe; and there consulted with the ladies about our going to Hampton Court to-morrow, and thence home, and after settled business there my wife and I to the Wardrobe, and there we lay all night in Captain Ferrers’ chambers, but the bed so soft that I could not sleep that hot night.

morning is a dull ache
an urge to go out
of fashion

war after war and the bed
so soft


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Sunday 11 May 1662.

Refusing the Future

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
         A tinge     A minim        Something of the smallest

size In such

increments the sense

of doubt doesn't feel so overwhelming

But also can't
be completely overruled

If some days I can hardly complete

a thought perhaps it's because I can't

bear to arrive at its irrefutable
conclusion

Imagine if you could rewind outcome

back to before process

Cajole

a fish


back into water
A bird

into the air

Viewshed

river in November light between bare woods and mountain

By myself at the office all the morning drawing up instructions for Portsmouth yard in those things wherein we at our late being there did think fit to reform, and got them signed this morning to send away to-night, the Duke being now there.
At noon to the Wardrobe; there dined. My Lady told me how my Lady Castlemaine do speak of going to lie in at Hampton Court; which she and all our ladies are much troubled at, because of the King’s being forced to show her countenance in the sight of the Queen when she comes. Back to the office and there all afternoon, and in the evening comes Sir G. Carteret, and he and I did hire a ship for Tangier, and other things together; and I find that he do single me out to join with me apart from the rest, which I am much glad of. So home, and after being trimmed, to bed.

of all the raw things
we signed away

the peak comes back
to the evening
for rest


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Saturday 10 May 1662.