You know why
There has to be a God
Richard says to me
Sitting in the back
Of Ali’s Deli
On 29th and Sixth
Look at the trillions
Of fish in the sea
And all the rice they grow
Underwater in the paddies
You take all that rice and fish
That comes from underwater
And you have enough for
A very healthy diet
Right there
And don’t forget
You still have
To call back
That Landlord
Down in Atlantic City
And if he asks you
How long I’m gonna stay
You should say
Just as long as he’s welcome
Just to show him that
I can be a very accommodating person
That is accommodating to
His disposition
And you have no idea
Frankly how temperamental
A Landlord’s disposition
Sometimes can be
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Saturday, November 5, 2011
For Dan
Let each poem
Be a celebration
Of life be it a moment
Of truth or continued
Uncertainty
As with the Saturday
Arrival of a package
From Putney
What the fuck?
My younger son exclaimed
And after opening it up
Holy Shit he further said
It’s a letter from Natalie
That says my application
Is complete and look here
It’s a plastic cow she sent me
Am I in or not?
Stop sending me
Rubber cows please
No more kitsch
I want the rest of my life
To begin already
Be a celebration
Of life be it a moment
Of truth or continued
Uncertainty
As with the Saturday
Arrival of a package
From Putney
What the fuck?
My younger son exclaimed
And after opening it up
Holy Shit he further said
It’s a letter from Natalie
That says my application
Is complete and look here
It’s a plastic cow she sent me
Am I in or not?
Stop sending me
Rubber cows please
No more kitsch
I want the rest of my life
To begin already
Thursday, November 3, 2011
This is a poem I composed at the James A. Farley Post Office on November 3rd where I went to send out one last package.
Let each day bring its own
good measure of life changing
circumstances
into existence
Each day may
the Kabbalah Truck
remain parked outside
With carts filled
with trays filled
with fresh baked
loaves of wisdom
Just waiting to greet you
on your way out
the front door
good measure of life changing
circumstances
into existence
Each day may
the Kabbalah Truck
remain parked outside
With carts filled
with trays filled
with fresh baked
loaves of wisdom
Just waiting to greet you
on your way out
the front door
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Blind to the World of Spirit
I wrote this poem early this morning. I wanted to post it quickly before having the chance to revise or disavow it.
I love this image that my friend Brad Melamed posted to FB today. This is part of recent series of work in which Brad has been exploring the connection between his hands and the rest of the world. It seems like such a perfect drawing to accompany this poem - the permittivity of the possible - the idea could be more perfectly or cogently conveyed!
Blind to the world of spirit
Only with eyes closed
Can the map's contours
Be discerned
How energy flows up
And out through
The crown of the head
Always rising and yet
Maintaining its own
Steady state
To know spirit
Is to know flesh and
Its dielectric constant
The permittivity of the possible
That love in every breath is
Made visible however
Limited in extent
In the chill morning air
![]() |
| Extension Cord by Brad Melamed |
I love this image that my friend Brad Melamed posted to FB today. This is part of recent series of work in which Brad has been exploring the connection between his hands and the rest of the world. It seems like such a perfect drawing to accompany this poem - the permittivity of the possible - the idea could be more perfectly or cogently conveyed!
Monday, October 10, 2011
A Song of Lu Moutain
Here is a translation of one of Li Bai's spirit poems. The Madman of Chu appears briefly in the Analects and chides Confucius for thinking he can or should meddle in affairs of state.
A Song of Lu Mountain
I am the madman of Chu
Who sang for Confucius
And laughed at him too
All the while
In both my hands
A precious jade staff
Tightly I clasped
To Yellow Crane Tower
At dawn I departed
Onto the Five Sacred Peaks
Searching for Immortals
Far and wide
For an entire lifetime
Across Ming Shan
I have wandered there
Then across Lu Shan
Where I approached the Big Dipper
Through the nine screens
Traversing through clouds
Like wind through
A brocade clothe
Out of the shadows
And into brightness
I found a crystal clear lake
Its surface shimmering with
Dazzling colorful rays
And the gates of golden watchtower
Opened silently before me
Revealing in the distance
Two more enormous peaks
Down a winding path I strolled
Where there flowed a silvery stream
Under three stone bridges
It passed and then tumbled
Down a sheer precipice
In a misty waterfall
Obscure in thick with a
Blue green haze
While on the skyline
Clouds glowed persimmon
Herald of the morning sun
And birds beat their wings
In endless flight on their way
To the state of Wu
Ascending these heights
What great vistas have I seen
Of Heaven and Earth
As well as places in between
A river that flows apart from
Space and time
Measureless and vast
Filled with whitecaps
Flowing fast
Yellow clouds
Propelled ten thousand miles
By the relentless wind
Towards nine distant
Snowcapped peaks
This is the song
Of Lu Shan
The spirit that
The mountain speaks
At leisure I gaze
At her rocky crags
As into a mirror
More clearly
It’s my own heart
I glimpse
Down pathways
Long overgrown
Moss everywhere
A thick dark green
Taking an extra dose
Of cinnabar tablets
Beyond this world
The heart stirs
Like a zither
Strummed three times
It trills from
First to last
And far in the distance
See the Immortals assembling
Filled with roseate inner light
In their hands they hold
Hibiscus blossoms
To present the Jade Emperor
In the Imperial Court
Before crossing the void
Nine levels ascending
At last arriving
At the truth of Lu
Approaching utter clarity
Though the work continues
Onward still
A Song of Lu Mountain
I am the madman of Chu
Who sang for Confucius
And laughed at him too
All the while
In both my hands
A precious jade staff
Tightly I clasped
To Yellow Crane Tower
At dawn I departed
Onto the Five Sacred Peaks
Searching for Immortals
Far and wide
For an entire lifetime
Across Ming Shan
I have wandered there
Then across Lu Shan
Where I approached the Big Dipper
Through the nine screens
Traversing through clouds
Like wind through
A brocade clothe
Out of the shadows
And into brightness
I found a crystal clear lake
Its surface shimmering with
Dazzling colorful rays
And the gates of golden watchtower
Opened silently before me
Revealing in the distance
Two more enormous peaks
Down a winding path I strolled
Where there flowed a silvery stream
Under three stone bridges
It passed and then tumbled
Down a sheer precipice
In a misty waterfall
Obscure in thick with a
Blue green haze
While on the skyline
Clouds glowed persimmon
Herald of the morning sun
And birds beat their wings
In endless flight on their way
To the state of Wu
Ascending these heights
What great vistas have I seen
Of Heaven and Earth
As well as places in between
A river that flows apart from
Space and time
Measureless and vast
Filled with whitecaps
Flowing fast
Yellow clouds
Propelled ten thousand miles
By the relentless wind
Towards nine distant
Snowcapped peaks
This is the song
Of Lu Shan
The spirit that
The mountain speaks
At leisure I gaze
At her rocky crags
As into a mirror
More clearly
It’s my own heart
I glimpse
Down pathways
Long overgrown
Moss everywhere
A thick dark green
Taking an extra dose
Of cinnabar tablets
Beyond this world
The heart stirs
Like a zither
Strummed three times
It trills from
First to last
And far in the distance
See the Immortals assembling
Filled with roseate inner light
In their hands they hold
Hibiscus blossoms
To present the Jade Emperor
In the Imperial Court
Before crossing the void
Nine levels ascending
At last arriving
At the truth of Lu
Approaching utter clarity
Though the work continues
Onward still
Saturday, October 1, 2011
From the Desk of the General Counsel (II)
With apologies to Gus and Jim
And to all my other clients
My sincerest regrets
That I couldn’t take
Their legal problems
Any more seriously
But being so ill-suited
To the tasks at hand
The endless wrangling and
The mind numbing detail
While nonetheless needing
To keep on paying the rent
Just as the scam blogs lament
I came to be compromised
To an unbearable extent
I felt guilt and distress
About the fraud of the law
But what’s a middle class boy
Supposed to do
When there’s rent
To be paid
And various other markers
Are all about to come due
And to all my other clients
My sincerest regrets
That I couldn’t take
Their legal problems
Any more seriously
But being so ill-suited
To the tasks at hand
The endless wrangling and
The mind numbing detail
While nonetheless needing
To keep on paying the rent
Just as the scam blogs lament
I came to be compromised
To an unbearable extent
I felt guilt and distress
About the fraud of the law
But what’s a middle class boy
Supposed to do
When there’s rent
To be paid
And various other markers
Are all about to come due
Reflections (III)
This is my translation of a poem by the Tang poet Zhang JiuLing also known by the courtesy name of Zishou. Don't know too much about his work. He served as a senior minister to the Emperor Xuanzong in the early 700's. The spiritual flavor of this poem reminds of sonnets by John Donne.
Reflections (III)
Into seclusion returning
A man resumes his lonely perch
Deliberate in manner
Bathed in purity and truth
Like a soaring goose
Feeling full of thanks
Because of the great distance
Spread out underneath
Over which the soul shall pass
Day and night
Mindful of
Emptiness
But can anyone
Attain its essence
Soaring or sinking
From self fully
Detached
Where
Am I to find
Such comfort
Please tell me truly
Reflections (III)
Into seclusion returning
A man resumes his lonely perch
Deliberate in manner
Bathed in purity and truth
Like a soaring goose
Feeling full of thanks
Because of the great distance
Spread out underneath
Over which the soul shall pass
Day and night
Mindful of
Emptiness
But can anyone
Attain its essence
Soaring or sinking
From self fully
Detached
Where
Am I to find
Such comfort
Please tell me truly
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