Josh Simmons started reading The Stone Sky by N. K. Jemisin (The Broken Earth, #3)
The Stone Sky by N. K. Jemisin (The Broken Earth, #3)
THIS IS THE WAY THE WORLD ENDS... FOR THE LAST TIME.
The Moon will soon return. Whether this heralds the …
Technicolor geek. Slow reader. Main social presence: @josh@josh.tel / josh.tel/@josh
I try to post a poem every day.
This link opens in a pop-up window
THIS IS THE WAY THE WORLD ENDS... FOR THE LAST TIME.
The Moon will soon return. Whether this heralds the …
The season of endings grows darker as civilization fades into the long cold night. Alabaster Tenring – madman, world-crusher, savior …
When was the last time you participated in an election for an online group chat or sat on a jury …
Myth by Rebecca Elson
What I want is a mythology so huge That settling on its grassy bank (Which may at first seem ordinary) You catch sight of the frog, the stone, The dead minnow jewelled with flies, And remember all at once The things you had forgotten to imagine.
In Blackwater Woods by Mary Oliver
Look, the trees are turning their own bodies into pillars
of light, are giving off the rich fragrance of cinnamon and fulfillment,
the long tapers of cattails are bursting and floating away over the blue shoulders
of the ponds, and every pond, no matter what its name is, is
nameless now. Every year everything I have ever learned
in my lifetime leads back to this: the fires and the black river of loss whose other side
is salvation, whose meaning none of us will ever know. To live in this world
you must be able to do three things: to love what is mortal; to hold it
against your bones knowing your own life depends on it; and, when the time comes to let it go, to let it go.
— Devotions by Mary Oliver (Page 389 - 390)
FUTURA VECCHIA, NEW YEAR’S EVE by Rebecca Elson
Returning, like the Earth To the same point in space, We go softly to the comfort of destruction, And consume in flames A school of fish, A pair of hens, A mountain poplar with its moss. A shiver of sparks sweeps round The dark shoulder of the Earth, Frisson of recognition, Preparation for another voyage, And our own gentle bubbles Float curious and mute Towards the black lake Boiling with light, Towards the sharp night Whistling with sound.
What I Didn't Know Before by Ada Limón
was how horses simply give birth to other horses. Not a baby by any means, not a creature of liminal spaces, but already a four-legged beast hellbent on walking, scrambling after the mother. A horse gives way to another horse and then suddenly there are two horses, just like that. That's how I loved you. You, off the long train from Red Bank carrying a coffee as big as your arm, a bag with two computers swinging in it unwieldily at your side. I remember we broke into laughter when we saw each other. What was between us wasn't a fragile thing to be coddled, cooed over. It came out fully formed, ready to run.
— The Carrying: Poems by Ada Limón (Page 71)
The Cure for Melancholy Is to Take the Horn by Natalie Diaz
Powered unicorn horn was once thought to cure melancholy.
What carries the hurt is never the wound but the red garden sewn by the horn as it left—and she left. I am rosing, blossoming absence—a brilliant alarum.
Brodsky said, Darkness restores what light cannot repair. You thrilled me—torn to the comb. I want everything—the ebon bull and the moon. I come and again for the honeyed horn.
Queen Elizabeth traded a castle for a single horn. I serve the kingdom of my hands— an army of touch marching the alcázar of your thighs blaring and bright as any war horn.
I arrive at you—half bestia, half feast. Night after night we harvest the luxed Bosque de Caderas, reap the darkful fruit mulling our mouths, separate sweet from thron.
My lanternist. Your hands wick at the bronzed lamp of my breast. Strike me to spark— tremble me to awe. Into your lap let me lay my heavy horns.
I fulfilled the prophecy of your throat, loosed in you the fabulous wing of my mouth. Red holy-red ghost. Left my body and spoke to God, came back seraphimed—copper feathered and horned.
Our bodies are nothing if not places to be had by, as in, God, she had me by the throat, by the hip bone, by the moon. God, she hurt me with my own horns.
— Postcolonial Love Poem by Natalie Diaz (Page 77)
Migratory by Les Murray
I am the nest that comes and goes, I am the egg that isn't now, I am the beach, the food in sand, the shade with shells and the shade with sticks. I am the right feeling on washed shine, in wing-lifting surf, in running about beak-focused: the feeling of here, that stays and stays, then lengthens out over the hills of hills and the feedy sea. I am the wrongness of here, when it is true to fly along the feeling the length of its great rightness, while days burn from vast to a gold gill in the dark to vast again, for many feeds and floating rests, till the sun ahead becomes the sun behind, and half the little far days of the night are different. Right feelings of here arrive with me: I am the nests danced for and now, I am the crying heads to fill, I am the beach, the sand in food, the shade with sticks and the double kelp shade.
— Learning Human by Les Murray
Grandfathers Say by Naomi Shihab Nye
Grandfathers say the garden is deep, old roots twisted beyond our worry or reach. Maybe our grief began there, in the long history of human suffering, where rain goes when it soaks out of sight. Savory smoke from ancient fires still lingers. At night you can smell it in the stones of the walls. When you awaken, voices from inside your pillow still holding you close.
— Tiny Journalist by Naomi Shihab Nye (Page 100)
Breathing by Allison Adelle Hedge Coke
For weeks we inhaled the dead scent the same, financier or footman, and like moths all rested on sills, searched for light.
— Streaming by Allison Adelle Hedge Coke (Page 104)
In this poetry debut Mosab Abu Toha writes about his life under siege in Gaza, first as a child, and …
@estelle@front-end.social 😂 if practice could do that I'd practice a lot more often! #LifeGoals
Practice Makes People by Amanda Gorman
The making of plans, When this is over; The We can't wait, Really our knuckles rapping Against the future, sounding Out what lies beneath its hull. But tomorrow isn't revealed, Rather rendered, refined. Wrought. Remember that fate isn't fought Against. It is fought for. Again & again.
Maybe there is no fresh wisdom, Just old woes, New words to name them by & the will to act. We've seen life lurching back in stops & starts Like a wet-born thing learning to walk. The air charged & changed. Us, charged & changed. A yoked-out eternity For that needle to pierce our arm. At last: a pain we asked for. Yes, it is enough to be moved By what we might be.
Sights and Sounds by Benjamin Zephaniah
There are More than Six thousand Different Languages Spoken On Earth.
There is No person On Earth Who can speak Them all.
Every person On Earth Could learn To speak Any language On Earth.
There are Some languages That are not Spoken.
Languages Like people Have family trees.
Languages Like people Are all precious.
Languages Like people Can disappear.
Languages are Like people
Respect your tongue.
Sign languages Are Crucial
Protect your hands.
— Wicked World! by Benjamin Zephaniah (Page 68 - 69)