is what they call artists who didn't go
to art school or take a single formal
art lesson in their lives. And yet
visions in their minds took shape
in clay or burst open with oils
on canvas. Grandma Moses pieced
her quilt-square landscapes, Van Gogh
his bending wheat fields and vibrant
yellow-green interiors. Fingers
listened to every shape and shadow
in the world. A tarnished teakettle
on a windowsill is no accessory— only
part of the equipment of daily life.
Tea sets with missing cups. Mismatched
plates, silverware from yard sales;
armchairs covered with oily antimacassars
pressed to stiffness from the light
of countless afternoons. Isn't this how
you've always learned— figuring it out
one trial at a time, as if from memory
before it becomes memory? The lesson:
you prepare for joy the way you prepare
for sorrow. How to stand without flinching
as orchids and velvet moths circle your head
and a black monkey coils a necklace of thorns
around your neck, from which a dead hummingbird
with wings outspread now dangles like a pendant.
~ after "Self Portrait with Thorn Necklace and
Hummingbird," Frida Kahlo (1940)
Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 16
A personal selection of posts from around the Anglophone blogosphere, including Substack, with a commitment to following a somewhat haphazardly chosen selection of poets, poetry lovers, literary critics and publishers over time. 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: the beast we were given, frothed verses of salt‑song, a man in a suit with pink bunny ears, a million mirror neurons, and much more. Enjoy.
Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 16”Death generation
Up betimes as I use to do, and in my chamber begun to look over my father’s accounts, which he brought out of the country with him by my desire, whereby I may see what he has received and spent, and I find that he is not anything extravagant, and yet it do so far outdo his estate that he must either think of lessening his charge, or I must be forced to spare money out of my purse to help him through, which I would willing do as far as 20l. goes.
So to my office the remaining part of the morning till towards noon, and then to Mr. Grant’s. There saw his prints, which he shewed me, and indeed are the best collection of any things almost that ever I saw, there being the prints of most of the greatest houses, churches, and antiquitys in Italy and France and brave cutts. I had not time to look them over as I ought, and which I will take time hereafter to do, and therefore left them and home to dinner.
After dinner, it raining very hard, by coach to Whitehall, where, after Sir G. Carteret, Sir J. Minnes, Mr. Coventry and I had been with the Duke, we to the Committee of Tangier and did matters there dispatching wholly my Lord Teviott, and so broke up.
With Sir G. Carteret and Sir John Minnes by coach to my Lord Treasurer’s, thinking to have spoken about getting money for paying the Yards; but we found him with some ladies at cards: and so, it being a bad time to speak, we parted, and Sir J. Minnes and I home, and after walking with my wife in the garden late, to supper and to bed, being somewhat troubled at Ashwell’s desiring and insisting over eagerly upon her going to a ball to meet some of her old companions at a dancing school here in town next Friday, but I am resolved she shall not go. So to bed.
This day the little Duke of Monmouth was marryed at White Hall, in the King’s chamber; and tonight is a great supper and dancing at his lodgings, near Charing-Cross. I observed his coat at the tail of his coach he gives the arms of England, Scotland, and France, quartered upon some other fields, but what it is that speaks his being a bastard I know not.
out of nothing
so far
out of a purse goes
the morning war
in which we collect
most of a house
raining ash over
some little mouth
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 20 April 1663.
Slow dance
(Easter day). Up and this day put on my close-kneed coloured suit, which, with new stockings of the colour, with belt, and new gilt-handled sword, is very handsome.
To church alone, and so to dinner, where my father and brother Tom dined with us, and after dinner to church again, my father sitting below in the chancel. After church done, where the young Scotchman preaching I slept all the while, my father and I to see my uncle and aunt Wight, and after a stay of an hour there my father to my brother’s and I home to supper, and after supper fell in discourse of dancing, and I find that Ashwell hath a very fine carriage, which makes my wife almost ashamed of herself to see herself so outdone, but to-morrow she begins to learn to dance for a month or two.
So to prayers and to bed. Will being gone, with my leave, to his father’s this day for a day or two, to take physique these holydays.
which hand is handsome
alone with each other
dancing we begin
to learn to dance
for two to pray
being one is holy
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Sunday 19 April 1663.
Bad company
Up betimes and to my office, where all the morning. At noon to dinner. With us Mr. Creed, who has been deeply engaged at the office this day about the ending of his accounts, wherein he is most unhappy to have to do with a company of fools who after they have signed his accounts and made bills upon them yet dare not boldly assert to the Treasurer that they are satisfied with his accounts. Hereupon all dinner, and walking in the garden the afternoon, he and I talking of the ill management of our office, which God knows is very ill for the King’s advantage. I would I could make it better.
In the evening to my office, and at night home to supper and bed.
in deep at the office
of a company of fools
who are not satisfied
with walking in the garden
and talk of the ill
management of God
for he could make it
better in a night
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Saturday 18 April 1663.
Triplets
My beginning poetry class is unsure
about tercets and triplets. They're both
stanzas with three lines. The difference
is that all three lines of a triplet rhyme.
I ask, Who has triplets in their family?
The girl who always sits front, center,
raises her hand; she's one of a set
of triplets. She looks slightly confused
when I ask, Which one of you is here?
Come as You Are
~ for Marianne
Will it be saag paneer, warmly
green with spice, or pork belly
glossy under bar lights; that pupu
platter at Alkaline where cocktails
are cute and the sake is tinged
with the smile of tropical fruit?
It's noon and we've changed
our minds half a dozen times
but there's no need to apologize
or forgive the wild swings of desire.
After all, isn't this our practice?
Tasting, arranging, revising,
paring away then calling out Wait,
bring back the menu? We want it all,
including a world wide enough
for our hungers. We want the longaniza
and egg rice bowl, but miss the tart
bite of atsara that should be on the side,
and so we'll ask politely for vinegar and
garlic. There are some people who fold
at Take it or leave it, as if the self
is an exact system. But we know this is it
each time. There's no rehearsal, no understudy
waiting in the wings. So we come as we are,
with all our mess and improvising, bearing
everything we carry to the table. Lint and loose
change in our pockets, maybe not even quite
enough to feed the meter, but right now it's OK.
Johnny’s Gone
no more rat race
my face masked
to ask others their motherlands
who cannot read
my lips precipitous
against the form-fitting fabric
but a mask with too many
holes holds
half the battle
of one with a gun sight
rickrackety
on caterpillar tracks
with the unrusted
buzz of a bot
in my earpiece
here are the coordinates
inordinate in their pin-
prick precision
a stalk a stork
a boy with a stick
a cloud of ungodly rain
Shriven
Up by five o’clock as I have long done and to my office all the morning, at noon home to dinner with my father with us. Our dinner, it being Good Friday, was only sugarsopps and fish; the only time that we have had a Lenten dinner all this Lent.
This morning Mr. Hunt, the instrument maker, brought me home a Basse Viall to see whether I like it, which I do not very well, besides I am under a doubt whether I had best buy one yet or no, because of spoiling my present mind and love to business.
After dinner my father and I walked into the city a little, and parted and to Paul’s Church Yard, to cause the title of my English “Mare Clausum” to be changed, and the new title, dedicated to the King, to be put to it, because I am ashamed to have the other seen dedicated to the Commonwealth.
So home and to my office till night, and so home to talk with my father, and supper and to bed, I have not had yet one quarter of an hour’s leisure to sit down and talk with him since he came to town, nor do I know till the holidays when I shall.
my father was a fish
the only Lenten dinner
home like a doubt
oiling my mind
and I ate because
I am dedicated
to my father on
our own holidays
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Friday 17 April 1663.
Driving Home
It took years and four apartment moves
before we decided “to buy;” years before
my husband could start to feel maybe
he could call this place home. Then again,
he revised that to mean, home not as in this
region of the country but rather the house
we signed the mortgage on, this one with a fig
tree in the yard which, even more ahead of season
now than last, is pushing out little green bulbs
of fruit under each cluster of splayed green
leaves. Though we both left the country
of our first formation, I still know
all the street names, a map carved
in memory surer than stone. But sometimes
his sense of home seems more solid than mine:
his sense of family grown both older and more
burnished through the years, despite the death
of both parents— whereas mine is chipped
and cracked in so many places from a history
of rifts predating my birth, and current ones
that make it difficult to resurface any memory
without summoning clogs that choke the throat.
He can conjure streamers of many-colored pressed
rice petals strung at every window in May,
the indistinct susurrus of children’s voices
in the streets. Mostly, though, he remembers
what exactly a sibling or a parent said and
on what occasion of daily life, knighted
with the same quality of kindness.
Perhaps it’s why I’m the one more often
rendered bereft by circumstance; the ruminant,
easy to collapse in tears. These days, driving
home under the newly lush canopy of leaves
that tints green-gold in late afternoon light,
my heart constricts. It's a laden barge,
bearing crates of artifacts from each of my
previous lives to here, though I couldn't
possibly do a full inventory anymore.

