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Morning Open Thread: To Live the Ways We Want to Live [1]

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Date: 2023-04-17

“Black Poets should live―not leap / From steel bridges, like the white boys do” “Let all Black Poets die as trumpets, / And be buried in the dust of marching feet” ― Etheridge Knight

“Poetry survives because it haunts and

it haunts because it is simultaneously

utterly clear and deeply mysterious;

because it cannot be entirely

accounted for, it cannot

be exhausted.”

― Louise Glück ___________________



Welcome to Morning Open Thread, a daily post

with a MOTley crew of hosts who choose the topic

for the day's posting. We support our community,

invite and share ideas, and encourage thoughtful,

respectful dialogue in an open forum. That’s a

feature, not a bug. Other than that, site rulz rule.

So grab your cuppa, and join in.

____________________________

13 poets have birthdays this week,

another stellar week in

National Poetry Month

____________________________

April 16

______________________________________

1871 – John Millington Synge born in a Dublin suburb; Irish playwright, writer, and poet; He was a key figure in the Irish Literary Revival, best known for his controversial comedy The Playboy of the Western World, which premiered at the Abbey Theatre in 1907, and caused riots stirred up by Irish nationalists. Synge suffered from Hodgkin's disease, and died at age 37 from a related form of cancer in 1909.

Prelude

by John Millington Synge



Still south I went and west and south again,

Through Wicklow from the morning till the night,

And far from cities, and the sights of men,

Lived with the sunshine, and the moon's delight.



I knew the stars, the flowers, and the birds,

The grey and wintry sides of many glens,

And did but half remember human words,

In converse with the mountains, moors, and fens.



“Prelude” from Poems and Translations by John M. Synge – Maunsel and Co. 1920 edition

_______________________



1918 – Spike Milligan born as Terence Alan Milligan in British Colonial India; Irish-English comedian, writer, musician, poet, playwright, and actor. His family moved back to England after WWI. He left school in the 1930s to work as a clerk while moonlighting as a jazz musician, and joined the Young Communist League. During WWII, he was a signaler in the 56th Heavy Regiment of the Royal Artillery on the south coast of England, but also entertained the troops with comedy sketches and music before being sent to North Africa and then Italy. He was wounded in the leg at the Battle of Monte Cassino, and hospitalized for the wound and shell shock. After the war, he wrote parodies of mainstream plays, which eventually led to The Goon Show. Milligan was the co-creator, chief writer, and a leading cast member of this popular BBC radio comedy show (1951-1960), which the NBC radio network began broadcasting in the U.S. in the mid-1950s. He also appeared on television and in films. The 1970 TV movie The Other Spike dramatised his nervous breakdown. Milligan died from kidney failure at age 83 in 2002. Among his many poetry collections are Silly Verse for Kids, Small Dreams of a Scorpion, Goblins, Chill Air, and Fleas, Knees and Hidden Elephants.

Silly Poem

by Spike Milligan



Said Hamlet to Ophelia,

I'll draw a sketch of thee,

What kind of pencil shall I use?

2B or not 2B?



“Silly Poem” from Hidden Words: Collected Poems, © 1993 by Spike Milligan Productions – Penguin Books

_______________________



1922 – Kingsley Amis born in south west London; English novelist, short story writer, poet, scriptwriter for radio and television, and critic. Though much better known for his novels, including Lucky Jim, That Uncertain Feeling, and The Old Devils, he also published several poetry collections, including Bright November, A Frame of Mind, and The Evans County. He died at age 73 after a stroke in 1995.

Something Nasty in the Bookshop

by Kingsley Amis



Between the Gardening and the Cookery

Comes the brief Poetry shelf;

By the Nonesuch Donne, a thin anthology

Offers itself.

Critical, and with nothing else to do,

I scan the Contents page,

Relieved to find the names are mostly new;

No one my age.

Like all strangers, they divide by sex:

Landscape Near Parma

Interests a man, so does The Double Vortex,

So does Rilke and Buddha.

"I travel, you see", "I think" and "I can read"

These titles seem to say;

But I Remember You, Love is my Creed,

Poem for J.,

The ladies' choice, discountenance my patter

For several seconds;

From somewhere in this (as in any) matter

A moral beckons.

Should poets bicycle-pump the human heart

Or squash it flat?

Man's love is of man's life a thing apart;

Girls aren't like that.

We men have got love well weighed up; our stuff

Can get by without it.

Women don't seem to think that's good enough;

They write about it.

And the awful way their poems lay them open

Just doesn't strike them.

Women are really much nicer than men:

No wonder we like them.

Deciding this, we can forget those times

We stayed up half the night

Chock-full of love, crammed with bright thoughts, names, rhymes,

And couldn't write.



“Something Nasty in the Bookshop” from Collected Poems: 1944-1979, © 1980 by Kingsley Amis – Viking Press

_______________________



1935 – Sarah Kirsch born as Ingrid Kirsch in Prussian Saxony, but changed her name to Sarah in protest of her father’s anti-Semitism; prominent German post-WWII poet and author. After she protested East Germany’s expulsion of poet and dissident Wolf Biermann in 1976, she was excluded from the Socialist Unity Party of Germany. In 1977 she moved to West Germany, but remained critical of both East and West Germany. She died at age 78 in 2013.

Cat lives

by Sarah Kirsch



Poets love cats of course

The gentle free who cannot be controlled

Who sleep and dream November rain away

On silk chairs or in rags speak back

Without saying a word shake themselves

And get on with their lives

Behind the hunter’s fence

While his possessed neighbours

Are still noting down licence plates

The one being observed in his four walls

Has long left the borders behind



“Cat lives” from Ice Roses: Selected Poems, © 2013 by Sarah Kirsch, translated by Anne Stokes – Carcanet Press

_______________________



1972 – Tracy K. Smith born in Falmouth, Massachusetts but raised in Northern California; African American poet and member of the Harvard English and African American studies faculties since 2021. She was the U.S. Poet Laureate from 2017 to 2019. Smith won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for her book, Life on Mars. Her other books of poetry include The Body’s Question, Duende, and Wade in the Water. Her 2015 memoir, Ordinary Light, was a finalist for the National Book Award in Nonfiction, and was named as one of the best books of the year by The New York Times and The Washington Post.

Flores Woman

by Tracy K. Smith

A species of tiny human has been discovered, which lived on the remote Indonesian island

of Flores just 18,000 years ago. . . . Researchers have so far unearthed remains from eight individuals who were just one metre tall, with grapefruit-sized skulls. These astonishing little

people . . . made tools, hunted tiny elephants and lived at the same time as modern humans

who were colonizing the area. — Nature, October 2004



Light: lifted, I stretch my brief body.

Color: blaze of day behind blank eyes.



Sound: birds stab greedy beaks

Into trunk and seed, spill husk



Onto the heap where my dreaming

And my loving live.



Every day I wake to this.



Tracks follow the heavy beasts

Back to where they huddle, herd.



Hunt: a dance against hunger.

Music: feast and fear.



This island becomes us.



Trees cap our sky. It rustles with delight

In a voice green as lust. Reptiles



Drag night from their tails,

Live by the dark. A rage of waves



Protects the horizon, which we would devour.

One day I want to dive in and drift,



Legs and arms wracked with danger.

Like a dark star. I want to last.



"Flores Woman" from Duende, © 2007 by Tracy K. Smith – Graywolf Press

____________________________

April 17

______________________________________

1586 – John Ford born at Bagtor, his family’s estate in Devonshire; notable English playwright, who also wrote poetry, during the reign of Charles I. There are few details of his life known from 1600, when he first arrived in London, to 1606, when he completed his first literary works Fame's Memorial and Honour Triumphant. In 1601, he was residing at the Middle Temple, a complex of buildings which is one of the Inns of Court, the four associations of the barristers of England and Wales, but it is not known if Ford was studying for the bar, or was a just gentleman boarder. Financial difficulties got him expelled from the Middle Temple between 1606 and 1608, when he was readmitted. From 1620 onward, he concentrated on writing plays, and is best known for his 1633 tragedy 'Tis Pity She's a Whore, a family drama with brother-sister incest. Ford’s date of death is unknown, but is believed to have been in 1639.

A Bridal Song

by John Ford



Comforts lasting, loves increasing,

Like soft hours never ceasing;

Plenty's pleasure, peace complying,

Without jars, or tongues envying;

Hearts by holy union wedded,

More than theirs by custom bedded;

Fruitful issues; life so graced,

Not by age to be defaced;

Budding as the year ensu'th,

Every spring another youth:

All what thought can add beside,

Crown this Bridegroom and this Bride!



____________________________

April 18

______________________________________

1915 – Joy Davidman born in New York City, American poet, author, and novelist; her first book of poetry, Letter to a Comrade, won the Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition in 1938 and the Russell Loines Award for Poetry in 1939. Her best-known work is Smoke on the Mountain: An Interpretation of the Ten Commandments. Her second marriage, to author C.S. Lewis, inspired the play and film Shadowlands. She was diagnosed with incurable cancer in 1957, and died at age 45 in 1960 in Oxford, England.

Amulet

by Joy Davidman



I am a serpent that will suck your blood,

Sting your bare eyes, or pleasurably drain

Sweet fiery thought and honey from your brain

And find the savor of your heartstrings good.



I will unclothe your spirit of your skin,

If I can take your body in the snare

That our of flowers and my flowering hair

And idle nights these incantations spin.



This is the way to keep your soul from me;

Let the sweet lure and the entangled guile

Crumble before your tolerant clear smile;

And let your cold and lovely honesty

Within my semblance made of shallow glass

Read my desires of you as they pass.



“Amulet” by Joy Davidman appeared in the January 1936 issue of Poetry magazine

_______________________



1931 – Etheridge Knight born in Corinth, Mississippi; African-American poet. He was one of eight children in a poor family, and though a bright student, he dropped out of school at age 16, and worked as a shoe shiner before joining the army in 1947. He served in Korea as a medical technician until 1950, when he was seriously wounded. He became addicted to morphine. Coming back to the U.S., he was a drug dealer and thief to support his habit. In 1960, he was arrested for armed robbery, and sentenced to prison. There, he began writing poetry, and some of it was published in the Negro Digest, attracting the attention of established Black poets like Gwendolyn Brooks and Haki Madhubuti. Dudley Randall, poet and owner of Broadside Press, published Knight’s first verse collection, Poems from Prison, in 1968, coinciding with his release from prison. His second book, Black Voices from Prison was published in 1970. He earned a bachelor's degree in American poetry and criminal justice from Martin Center University in Indianapolis in 1990, and taught creative writing until he became too ill to continue. He died of lung cancer in 1991 just weeks before his 60th birthday.

He Sees Through Stone

by Etheridge Knight



He sees through stone

he has the secret eyes

this old black one

who under prison skies

sits pressed by the sun

against the western wall

his pipe between purple gums



the years fall

like overripe plums

bursting red flesh

on the dark earth



his time is not my time

but I have known him

in a time gone



he led me trembling cold

into the dark forest

taught me the secret rites

to make it with a woman

to be true to my brothers

to make my spear drink

the blood of my enemies



now black cats circle him

flash white teeth

snarl at the air

mashing green grass beneath

shining muscles

ears peeling his words

he smiles

he knows

the hunt the enemy

he has the secret eyes

he sees through stone



"He Sees Through Stone" from The Essential Etheridge Knight, © 1986 by Etheridge Knight – University of Pittsburgh Press

_______________________



1947 [year disputed] – Kathy Acker born, American experimental novelist, playwright, poet, essayist, and feminist writer; listening to stories of women whose lives were completely different from her own during her brief stint as a stripper in the mid-1970s had a profound impact on her understanding of gender and power relationships and on her early work. She had several long-term relationships with men and was married twice, but was openly bisexual. In 1979, she won the Pushcart Prize for her short story “New York City in 1979.” She wrote some of her most critically acclaimed works while in living in England in the 1980s, then returned to the U.S. as a visiting professor at several universities and colleges. In 1996, she was diagnosed with breast cancer, and lost her faith in conventional medicine after an unsuccessful surgery. In 1997, she died in a Tijuana Mexico alternative cancer treatment clinic.

the diseased

by Kathy Acker



I want all of you out there to shut up.

I'm going to live the ways we want to live.

What do you want of me now?

Liver, blood, guts?

The only thing left is madness.



You too’re gonna drive yourself to the pits:

You're gonna walk on coals through blazing fires:

You're gonna drink down the world's most painful poisons:

That's what wanting love is.



My man isn't like other men.

He can keep you in prison.

He can make you do anything.

I know why all of you want him.



But worse, what happens

if my Slave Trader

for some stupid reason

happens to like you?



Then you’re screwed:

no more sleep

Nor will he let you keep your eyes.

He compulsions alone can fetter forces wildness.

How many times a spineless being you'll run to



all the weaky friends you formerly despised,

tremulous sorrow will arise with tears shuddering

warts and pimples and fleas’ll appear on your skin

all your wishes’ll go, words are no more,

you'll never again now who you are.



You'll learn to serve him, girl, to be whatever he wants,

to disappear whenever he wants you to go.

You'll learn why people who want, want to die

why the whole world are lies.

Your rich parents ain't helping:

cause Love's more powerful than social climbing.

But if even small you have given footsteps of your failure

how quickly from such a reputation you will be a murmur!

Not I then I will be able to comfort to bear to asking you



‘Cause I'm sick too.

At this point sicker than you.

My disease is forever.

I know no comfort.

Since we're both maniacs,

let’s be nice to each other.

I myself want to live.

I want to burn.

all I ask is no one loves me

in return.



“the diseased” from Blood and Guts in High School, © 1978 by Kathy Acker – Grove Press

____________________________

April 20

______________________________________

1826 – Dinah Mulock Craik born in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire; English novelist, poet, and author of biographical sketches of famous writers, who often used Mrs. Craik as her pen name. Her most popular novel was John Halifax, Gentleman, but she wrote dozens of articles and sketches and hundreds of poems for popular magazines of the day in order to support herself, and help her family. In 1858, A Woman's Thoughts about Women was published, a series of essays advocating for women being educated, so they would be capable of supporting themselves if they remained unmarried, or were widowed. She died of heart failure at age 61 in Shortlands, a London suburb.

Green Things Growing

by Dinah M. Craik



O the green things growing, the green things growing,

The faint sweet smell of the green things growing!

I should like to live, whether I smile or grieve,

Just to watch the happy life of my green things growing.



O the fluttering and the pattering of those green things growing!

How they talk each to each, when none of us are knowing;

In the wonderful white of the weird moonlight

Or the dim dreamy dawn when the cocks are crowing.



I love, I love them so - my green things growing!

And I think that they love me, without false showing;

For by many a tender touch, they comfort me so much,

With the soft mute comfort of green things growing.



And in the rich store of their blossoms glowing

Ten for one I take they're on me bestowing:

Oh, I should like to see, if God's will it may be,

Many, many a summer of my green things growing!



But if I must be gathered for the angel's sowing,

Sleep out of sight awhile, like the green things growing,

Though dust to dust return, I think I'll scarcely mourn,

If I may change into green things growing.



“Green Things Growing” from Poems of Dinah Maria Mulock Craik – Kessinger Publishing 2008 facisimile reprint

____________________________

April 21

______________________________________

1816 – Charlotte Brontë born in Thornton, West Riding in Yorkshire; English novelist and poet, eldest of the three Brontë sisters who survived into adulthood and wrote novels that became classics of English literature. Her father was an Irish Anglican clergyman, and the family lived in straightened circumstances. She is best known as the author of Jane Eyre, which was published in 1847, although it was originally published under the pseudonym Currer Bell. Several reviewers of the time criticized Jane Eyre for its unconventionalism, immorality, passionate exchanges, anti-authoritative and anti-Christian tendencies, and improbabilities within the storyline, even though some of them admitted the quality of the writing was remarkable. In 1848, Brontë released a preface with the second edition of Jane Eyre to defend the novel against criticism, while also acknowledging its success and thanking the press, public, and publishers. Charlotte Brontë was the last to die of all her siblings. She became pregnant shortly after her marriage to Arthur Bell Nicholls in June 1854 but died on March 31, 1855, almost certainly from hyperemesis gravidarum, a complication of pregnancy which causes excessive nausea and vomiting.

Speak of the North!

by Charlotte Brontë



Speak of the North! A lonely moor

Silent and dark and tractless swells,

The waves of some wild streamlet pour

Hurriedly through its ferny dells.



Profoundly still the twilight air,

Lifeless the landscape; so we deem

Till like a phantom gliding near

A stag bends down to drink the stream.



And far away a mountain zone,

A cold, white waste of snow-drifts lies,

And one star, large and soft and lone,

Silently lights the unclouded skies.



_______________________



1930 – Hilda Hilst born, influential Brazilian author, poet, and playwright; noted for her poetry collection, Presságio (Omen), and her novels, Com meus olhos de cão (With My Dog Eyes) and A obscena senhora D (The Obscene Madame D). She died at age 73 of a chronic heart and pulmonary condition in 2004.

Of Desire

by Hilda Hilst



Because there is desire within me, everything glimmers.

Before, daily life was thinking of heights

Seeking Another decanted

Deaf to my human bark.

Sap and sweat, they never came to be.

Today, flesh and bones, laborious, lascivious

You take my body. And what rest you give me

After the readings. I dreamt of cliffs

When there was a garden by my side.

I thought of climbs where there were no signs.

Ecstatic, I fuck you

Instead of yapping at Nothingness.



– translated by Lavinia Saad, Brazilian Poetry in Translation blogger

____________________________

April 22

______________________________________

1943 – Louise Glück born in New York City and grew up on Long Island; American poet and essayist; winner of the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for The Wild Iris; Library of Congress Special Bicentennial Consultant (2000-2002) and Poet Laureate (2003-2004); and 2014 National Book Award (Poetry) for Faithful and Virtuous Night. In 2020, she won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Her father was a Hungarian Jewish immigrant who helped invent and market the X-Acto Knife. She attended Sarah Lawrence College and Columbia University without graduating from either school. In her mid-twenties, she published her poetry collection Firstborn to mixed reviews. Glück has since published over a dozen collections which have been heaped with honors.

The Garment

by Louise Glück



My soul dried up.

Like a soul cast into a fire, but not completely,

not to annihilation. Parched,

it continued. Brittle,

not from solitude but from mistrust,

the aftermath of violence.

Spirit, invited to leave the body,

to stand exposed a moment, —

trembling, as before

your presentation to the divine —

spirit lured out of solitude

by the promise of grace,

how will you ever again believe

the love of another being?

My soul withered and shrank.

The body became for it too large a garment.

And when hope was returned to me

it was another hope entirely.



“The Garment” from Meadowlands © 1997 by Louise Glück – Ecco/HarperCollins

____________________________

G’Morning/Afternoon/Evening MOTlies!

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