X
A few minutes ago, a Facebook friend posted the story of how her grape crop, having fermented on the vine before it could be harvested, was consumed in its entirety by a herd of deer. In telling the story, she composed the phrase, "drunk deer dancing in the moonlight." I noted that it was a great line. Another friend responded, "The first line of a poem?"
I thought about it briefly and decided that not a poem, but a haiku, could best contain the image:
xxxxxgrape arbor stripped clean
drunk deer dance in the moonlight
xxxxxno jelly this year
And that's how 2013 the Year in Verse, comes to an end.
X
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Monday, December 30, 2013
Readings: Kurt Vonnegut Revisited
X
Having decided that a good project for the New Year would be to reread the major works of one of the formative authors of my youth, Kurt Vonnegut, I have made an early start this morning by picking up his short-story* collection, Welcome to the Monkey House. The title story of that collection dates from 1968. The excerpt below shows how precisely Vonnegut had his finger to the pulse of the trends that have brought us to the sad place that we are in today:
There was a Howard Johnson's next door to every Ethical Suicide Parlor, and vice versa. The Howard Johnson's had an orange roof and the Suicide Parlor had a purple roof, but they were both Government. Practically everything was Government.
Practically everything was automated, too. Nancy and Mary and the sheriff were lucky to have jobs. Most people didn't. The average citizen moped around home and watched television, which was the Government. Every fifteen minutes his television would urge him to vote intelligently or consume intelligently, or worship in the church of his choice, or love his fellowman, or obey the laws--or pay a call to the nearest Ethical Suicide Parlor and find out how friendly and understanding a Hostess could be.
Although we don't yet have Ethical Suicide Parlors, and a larger percentage of the population still has jobs than Vonnegut predicts will be the case when world population is at 17 billion, practically everything is already the Government.
Vonnegut's protagonist in Welcome to the Monkey House, the underground revolutionary, Billy the Poet, towards the end of the story speaks some prophetic lines to Nancy, the Hostess whom he has kidnapped in order to forcibly detox her from the Government mandated drug that renders every citizen numb from the waist down, and to then deflower. Nancy says to him: "The world can't afford sex anymore." Billy the Poet replies:
"Of course it can afford sex, ...All it can't afford anymore is reproduction. ...If you go back through history, you'll find that the people who have been most eager to rule, to make the laws, to enforce the laws and to tell everybody exactly how God Almighty wants things here on Earth--those people have forgiven themselves and their friends for anything and everything. But they have been absolutely disgusted and terrified by the natural sexuality of common men and women."
Tea Party, anyone? This project is going to be fun!
X
______________________
*Actually, there are some short prose pieces other than stories in the book.
Having decided that a good project for the New Year would be to reread the major works of one of the formative authors of my youth, Kurt Vonnegut, I have made an early start this morning by picking up his short-story* collection, Welcome to the Monkey House. The title story of that collection dates from 1968. The excerpt below shows how precisely Vonnegut had his finger to the pulse of the trends that have brought us to the sad place that we are in today:
There was a Howard Johnson's next door to every Ethical Suicide Parlor, and vice versa. The Howard Johnson's had an orange roof and the Suicide Parlor had a purple roof, but they were both Government. Practically everything was Government.
Practically everything was automated, too. Nancy and Mary and the sheriff were lucky to have jobs. Most people didn't. The average citizen moped around home and watched television, which was the Government. Every fifteen minutes his television would urge him to vote intelligently or consume intelligently, or worship in the church of his choice, or love his fellowman, or obey the laws--or pay a call to the nearest Ethical Suicide Parlor and find out how friendly and understanding a Hostess could be.
Although we don't yet have Ethical Suicide Parlors, and a larger percentage of the population still has jobs than Vonnegut predicts will be the case when world population is at 17 billion, practically everything is already the Government.
Vonnegut's protagonist in Welcome to the Monkey House, the underground revolutionary, Billy the Poet, towards the end of the story speaks some prophetic lines to Nancy, the Hostess whom he has kidnapped in order to forcibly detox her from the Government mandated drug that renders every citizen numb from the waist down, and to then deflower. Nancy says to him: "The world can't afford sex anymore." Billy the Poet replies:
"Of course it can afford sex, ...All it can't afford anymore is reproduction. ...If you go back through history, you'll find that the people who have been most eager to rule, to make the laws, to enforce the laws and to tell everybody exactly how God Almighty wants things here on Earth--those people have forgiven themselves and their friends for anything and everything. But they have been absolutely disgusted and terrified by the natural sexuality of common men and women."
Tea Party, anyone? This project is going to be fun!
X
______________________
*Actually, there are some short prose pieces other than stories in the book.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Reflections: a Synchronicity?
I belong to a group on Facebook where members share their
dreams. This morning I posted the following on that page:
I slept long and well last night--over eight hours,
unusual for me. I remember only a snatch of the many vivid and busy dreams I
was having: I was in the basement of my house and found that there were foreign
students living in at least two different rooms down there. I went into the
room of one student, who was Chinese. He was very friendly, but not very fluent
in English. We shook hands. He was able to make me understand that he could
hearing me pounding on the keyboard of my computer through the ceiling of his
room at night.
A couple of hours after getting up this morning, I
decided to find a book in my personal library that I had been meaning to reread
for a long time, but had never gotten around to reading--"Jesus and Lao
Tzu, the Parallel Sayings" edited by Martin Aronson. Once I held the book
in my hands, I decided that I would write a blog post on it later today. Having
made that decision, I suddenly connected that inspiration to my dream. Forever
Jung.
The first section of the book is titled “Simplicity,” which
seems to be a thing that I need more of -- in my soul, if not in my life in the
external environment. I have simplified my daily actions to a great degree, but
my inner life has remained overly complicated. I have suffered great losses
over the past two years. Right at the time of each of these crises there is
much pain to be dealt with. But each event also entails many necessary
activities, the very busyness of which is a firewall against the onset of
despair. Only when the last crisis is past and is not immediately followed up
by another can each loss be felt in its fullness, and the real pain begin. As I
write this today, I think I am as close to despair as I have ever been in this
life. Therefore, simplicity:
Jesus:
Martha, Martha, you are busy and bothered about many things;
there is need of only one thing. Mary has chosen the better part, which shall
not be taken from her. ~ Luke 10:41
Lao Tzu:
If you keep your mouth shut
and guard the senses
life is free of toil.
Open your mouth
always be busy and life is beyond hope. ~ Tao Te Ching 52
Jesus:
Unless you change and become like children, you will never
enter the kingdom of heaven. ~ Matthew 18:3
Lao Tzu:
Being the stream of the universe,
ever true and unswerving,
become as a little child once more. ~ Tao Te Ching 28
Jesus:
Blessed are the pure of heart, for they will see God. ~
Matthew 5:8
Lao Tzu:
Reveal your simple self,
embrace your original nature. ~ Tao Te Ching 19
This seems as good a place as any to stop. This, too, could
become too busy. To quench despair, let go of the circumstances causing the
pain--embrace your original nature--become as a little child once more:
trusting.
Jesus:
Your Father knows what you need before you ask him. ~
Matthew 6:8
Lao Tzu:
The Tao of heaven does not ask,
yet is supplied with all its needs. ~ Tao Te Ching 73
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Rodak's Writings: Time Is a Wind
X
Time Is a Wind
Its essential motion
makes it cold.
We are cooked up
during an interstice –
a brief calm
called the present.
Then time sets
us on the sill
of existence
to watch
each other
slowly cool
to a chill.
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Rodak's Writings: Angst
X
Angst
existence
reduced
by
some kenotic pathology
to
a small waiting room
the
light is too bright
most
of the sad seats
are
empty
but
just over there
fear
that no train comes
fidgets
in conspicuous dread
next
to fear that it comes
much
too soon
silent
they sit
each
a stranger
far
from home
X
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Rants: Against the Dying of the Light
Below are a few random realizations, perhaps brought on by the winter solstice:
War:
It is only the atrocities that get the job done.
Witnessed:
A cult of closeted sodomites (and worse), publicly denouncing sodomy.
Thicker Than Water:
The idea that I legitimately need, or am in any way entitled to, a
modicum of emotional support is exposed as delusional by the annoyed
indifference of those who are best positioned to know.
New Year's Resolution:
While I am pants-down-ankle-grabbing I will bravely whistle "God
Bless America,"
no matter what happens...
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Rodak's Writings: Into the Archives
X
This poem provided the title of a collection of poems, written in the 1970s, that was put together in an unsuccessful attempt to win a prize:
This poem provided the title of a collection of poems, written in the 1970s, that was put together in an unsuccessful attempt to win a prize:
Mythic Passions
Did
I come onto the scene
decently
clothed and smiling?
That
was my little lie.
I
was really a sleep-shagged beast,
down
from the mountains,
sniffing
for springtime.
I
dreamt the history of the race
in
my rock-bound slumber.
And
if I play the game,
speaking
of well-trimmed lawns
and
sunlit, blossomy gardens,
know
that my true keep is the forest maze.
My
boundaries run from this tree
to
that rock
to
the sea.
Enter
and
the way out is yours
to
find.
Would
you like to test
my
nature?
Feel
the beard of my face.
Measure
its rasp against that of my cunning.
When
I dream I plot.
Call
me Snare-Beauty, Crush-Lovely:
by
sinew and fang,
I’ve
got you now, my Sweet.
X
X
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Rodak's Writings: Muted by Beauty - a poem
X
muted
by beauty
she
demands to be heard
his
eyes are deaf
her
knee is martial
the
gentle pets had fled the room
before
his fingers started howling
X
X
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Rodak's Writings: an Old Poem
X
Here is a poem that is at least 40 years old:
Here is a poem that is at least 40 years old:
maya, my love
before the wind arose
the grasses had no voice.
before the clouds rolled in
the pond played with the moon.
before the rains came
the mountain sloped just so.
turn down the sheets--
we meet again, my love.
X
Readings: Oh, my...
X
Below is another selection, #54, from Jim Harrison's AFTER IKKYU:
This morning I felt strong and jaunty in my mail order
Israeli commando trousers. Up at Hard Luck Ranch I spoke
to the ravens in baritone, fed the cats with manly gestures.
Acacia thorns can't penetrate these mighty pants.
Then out by the corral the infant pup began to weep, abandoned.
In an instant I became another of earth's billion sad mothers.
X
Below is another selection, #54, from Jim Harrison's AFTER IKKYU:
This morning I felt strong and jaunty in my mail order
Israeli commando trousers. Up at Hard Luck Ranch I spoke
to the ravens in baritone, fed the cats with manly gestures.
Acacia thorns can't penetrate these mighty pants.
Then out by the corral the infant pup began to weep, abandoned.
In an instant I became another of earth's billion sad mothers.
X
Monday, December 16, 2013
Rodak's Writings: a New Poem
X
Fullness
I lick the tip
of my index
finger
and press it
to the interior surface
of the emptied
ziploc bag
to capture
the eight or ten
fat grains of
salt
that have fallen from
the devoured pretzels
–
not even these
shall be wasted
--
oh, how they
please
my grateful
tongue
X
Rodak's Writings: a Poetry Challenge Successfully (?) Engaged
X
Yesterday, a Facebook friend and fellow
poet named Gail Wolper issued a poetry challenge to a set of her friends. That
challenge was to compose a poem, consisting of four stanzas, in any style,
based on the prompt, “earth air fire water.”
I immediately remembered that I had already written a poem with that
title and went to my files to see if I could use it to meet the challenge. Upon
finding the poem, it was evident that it consisted of only two stanzas. I
briefly considered trying to make those two stanzas into four, but saw almost
immediately that this strategy was not going to work. The original poem is
here:
Earth, Air, Fire, Water
Were it
all only forms
of
fire-laced mineral—
creatio ex nihilo—
there’d
be no one at whom
to
bitch—no one to please—
no one
from whom
to
hide…
Yet
supposing one needed
to have
a Whom—
My Whom
I would imagine
to
smell much like you
in the
mounting morning
— tidal —
moving
mimic
of the
sea.
Having realized that I would either need
to start from scratch and compose an entirely new poem, or would have to
drastically revise the existing one, I chose the latter option. This is what I came up with:
Earth, Air, Fire, Water
X
X
X
X
Were it all
only forms
of fire-laced
mineral --
creatio ex
nihilo--
there’d be no
one for whom
to yearn—no
one to please --
no one toward
whom
to strive …
The roiling
clouds of dawn --
dense in
their blackness --
could only
vent their wet
against
flanks
of enervated
stone--
its mute
indifference
a mockery…
The lightning
flash
would ignite
vast stands
of tethered
timber
that
sacrificed
their
fragrant vapors
to a faceless
void
sans appetite
or nostril…
Yet posit
there a lonely I
who needed to
have a whom—
I would
imagine that whom
to smell much
like you
in the
mounting morning
—tidal—moving
mimic
of the Sea…
So, gentle reader – which version do you prefer?
X
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)