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Tag Archives: 2sDay Poems

Cranberries& Rugs (#2sdayPoems)

12 Tuesday Sep 2017

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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2sDay Poems, Jill Osier, Molly Peacock, poets reading, Should Our Undoing Come Down Upon Us White, The Second Blush, women poets

There is the slightest chill in the air today, and already I am thinking of cranberries, sweaters and fire-side rugs. Here are two colder-weather poems by Molly Peacock & Jill Osier with bonus audio files.

THE FLAW

by Molly Peacock

The best thing about a hand-made pattern
is the flaw.
Sooner or later in a hand-loomed rug,
among the squares and flattened triangles,
a little red nub might soar above a blue field,
or a purple cross might sneak in between
the neat ochre teeth of the border.
The flaw we live by, the wrong color floss,
now wreathes among the uniform strands…

FULL TEXT HERE (audio file at top-center of that page)

from The Second Blush (W.W.Norton,2008)

 

IO

by Jill Osier

Today I find lowbush cranberries edging the yard. Full ripe,
they lie secret as gems among broken twigs and leaves blown down.
I pick two generous handfuls. There may be more. You told me
the story of Jupiter once. How when Voyager passed by one of its moons,
it recorded something like ten volcanic eruptions. Scientists reasoned
that if at random they found ten, the place must be breaking all the time.
They looked closer, and they were right. It is later and I’m home and I stand….

 

FULL TEXT HERE
audio here
latest collection: Should Our Undoing Come Down Upon Us White

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American Landscapes (#2sdayPoems)

14 Tuesday Jun 2016

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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2sDay Poems, American Landscape, BOA, Constance Urdang, In a Landscape, John Gallaher, Pitt Poetry Series, Poetry Foundation, Poetry Out Loud, The Lone Woman and Others

bigapplecow

Roadside “lawn ornament” (Mount Airy, NC)

I recently ran across this image of Mount Airy, NC’s Big Apple Cow in flickr wonderland.  Hope Bill doesn’t mind the link.  It made me think of a poem I’d seen on Poetry Out Loud in April, which led me back to another poem from  Poetry mag (June 2014), which ended in this interesting but somewhat rambling post. There are apples and cows and interior/American landscapes. Well, just read the post.

[ Use the links for full text, author bio and collection info.]

 

IN A LANDSCAPE: I
by John Gallaher

“Are you happy?” That’s a good place to start, or maybe,
“Do you think you’re happy?” with its more negative
tone. Sometimes you’re walking, sometimes falling. That’s part
of the problem too, but not all of the problem. Flowers out the window
or on the windowsill, and so someone brought flowers.
We spend a long time interested in which way the car would
best go in the driveway. Is that the beginning of an answer?
Some way to say who we are?

 

Well, it brings us up to now, at any rate, as the limitations
of structure, which is the way we need for it to be. Invent some muses
and invoke them, or save them for the yard, some animus
to get us going. And what was it Michael said yesterday? That
the committee to do all these good things has an agenda to do all these
other things as well, that we decide are less good in our estimation,
so then we have this difficulty. It just gets to you sometimes. We have
a table of red apples and a table of green apples, and someone asks youinalandscape_bookstore_large
about apples, but that’s too general, you think, as you’ve made several distinctions to get to this place of two tables, two colors. How can that be an answer to anything?…

 

FULL TEXT HERE

from In a Landscape(BOA,2014)

 

TO LIVE WITH A LANDSCAPE

By Constance Urdang

 

      1
Take your boulevards, your Locust Street,
Your Chestnut, Pine, your Olive,
Take your Forest Park and Shaw’s Garden,
Your avenues that lead past street-corner violence,
Past your West End, past your Limit,
To shabby suburban crime,
Vandalism in the parking-lot,
Abductions from the shopping mall—
Like making the same mistake over and over
On the piano or typewriter keys,
Always hitting the wrong note—
How “very alive, very American”
They are, how chockful of metaphysics,
Hellbent to obliterate the wilderness.

 

    2
Learn to live with sycamores,
Their sad, peeling trunks, scabbed all over
With shabby patches, their enormous leaves
In dingy shades of ochre and dun1297937
Rattling like castanets, their roots
Thick as a man’s leg, crawling
Like enormous worms out of the broken pavements,
Continually thrusting themselves up
From pools of shade they make,
Sculpturing the street
With dappled dark and light
As glaucoma, a disease of the eye,
Makes the world more beautiful
With its mysterious rainbows…

 

 

FULL TEXT HERE
from The Lone Woman and Others (Univ. of Pittsburgh, 1980)

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A 2Jane ‘House’ (2sday Poems)

11 Tuesday Aug 2015

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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Tags

2sDay Poems, An Hour is Not a House, art/poetry fusion, Jane Cooper, Jane Hirshfield, TED talk, the art of the metaphor, The Building of a House, women poets

houseframe
Two prolific poets approach ‘house’ through different doors:

THE BUILDER OF HOUSES

by Jane Cooper

What was the blond child building
Down by the pond at near-dark
When the trees had lost their gildingcooper
And the giant shadows stepped
To the water’s edge, then stopped?
With intent fingers, doing a boy’s work
In a boy”s old sweater
She hammered against her dear world’s dirty weather.

Proud of her first house
Which boasted an orange-crate ceiling
A pillow, a stuffed mouse…

 

FULL TEXT HERE
from Poetry, Oct. 1958

 

 

AN HOUR IS NOT A HOUSE

by Jane Hirshfield

An hour is not a house,
a life is not a house,
you do not go through them as ifjane-hirshfield-2012-448
they were doors to another.

Yet an hour can have shape and proportion,
four walls, a ceiling
An hour can be dropped like a glass….

FULL TEXT HERE
from Poetry, Apr. 2013

Bonus tidbit: Hirshfield on The Art of the Metaphor (TED talk)

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Rapture& Wolves (2sDay Poems)

02 Tuesday Jun 2015

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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#readwomen, 2sDay Poems, Carol Ann Duffy, Little Red Cap, Rapture, The World's Wife, women poets

 

“ Poetry, above all, is a series of intense moments – its power is not in narrative. I’m not dealing with facts, I’m dealing with emotion.” –Carol Ann Duffy

Carol Ann Duffy

from Rapture

NAME

When did your name
change from a proper noun
to a charm?

Its three vowels
like jewels
on the thread of my breath.

Its consonants
brushing my mouth
like a kiss.

I love your name.
I say it again and again
in this summer rain.

I see it…

[Full Text Here]

 

from The World’s Wife

LITTLE RED CAP

At childhood’s end, the houses petered out
into playing fields, the factory, allotments
kept, like mistresses, by kneeling married men,
the silent railway line, the hermit’s caravan,
till you came at last to the edge of the woods.
It was there that I first clapped eyes on the wolf.

He stood in a clearing, reading his verse out loud
in his wolfy drawl, a paperback in his hairy paw,
red wine staining his bearded jaw. What big ears
he had! What big eyes he had! What teeth!
In the interval, I made quite sure he spotted me,
sweet sixteen, never been, babe, waif, and bought me a drink…

[Full Text Here]

9780571199952_p0_v1_s260x420

rapture

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Not Just 2: A Plethora of Medusa Poems & a Giveaway

19 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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#ReadWomen2014, 2sDay Poems, Academy of American Poets, Alice Friman, Body of this Death, British Poets, Carol Ann Duffy, Carvaggio, Chris Wauchop, feminist poets, finger tats, Frederick Sandys, giveaway, Louise Bogan, Medusa Poems, Melissa Dickson, Modern American Poetry, Negative Capability Press, Patricia Smith, Poetry magazine, slam poets, Sweet Aegis, Sylvia Plath, The World's Wife, women poets

medusa-large

Frederick Sandys (1829-1904)

 

 

One of my favorite finds from National Poetry Month is Negative Capability author Melissa Dickson’s  SweetAegis:Medusa Poems.  Enjoy Medusa’s Dilemma (and a bonus poem over on the Dead Mule blog. ) Here’s a link to an interview about the collection.

 

 

 

 

Screenshot_202014-06-19_2022.21.03_400w

Alice Pike Barney, 1892

Alice Pike Barney, 1892

 

 

 

Louise Bogan’s darker Medusa is from Poetry’s archives.  The full collection  Body of this Death (1923) is available as a FREE download in several formats at archive.org. Find out more about Bogan’s life and career at Modern American Poetry.

 

 

 

 


 

medusa-1597-1.jpg!Blog

Caravaggio, 1597

 

Carol Ann Duffy’s Medusa is part of The World’s Wife collection and is widely studied in Secondary Schools in the UK. A brief bio from the British Council.  Hear her speak on her fairytale/mythological characters in an hour-long Reflections Of The Poet Laureate lecture.

 

 

 

 

index

medusa_rear

model by Chris Wauchop

 

 

 

Slam poet Patricia Smith’s Medusa is even more dazzling in person.  Get your performance fix from this Hampshire Slam Collective video. 

 

 

 

 

 

Finger Tat by Bang Bang

Finger Tat by Bang Bang

 

 

The great Sylvia Plath reads her Medusa in a vintage video find. Astute listeners will note that the spoken version differs slightly from that in The Collected Poems.

 

 

 

 

 

***Have a Medusa poem of your own or admire that of another poet? Post in the comments for a chance to win a set of handmade bookmarks with fairytale/mythological themes.

 

 

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Go Ask Alice (2sDay Poems)

12 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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#ReadWomen2014, 2sDay Poems, Alice Friman, Alice Notley, Culture of One, LSU Press, Lucia Stewart, poetry readings, Songs and Stories of the Ghouls, University of Chicago, University of Georgia summer poetry, Vinculum, Wesleyan University Press, women artists

alice-in-wonderland-1-lucia-stewart

Alice in Wonderland by Lucia Stewart (prints available at Fine Art America)

 

Today’s post features not two poems, but two readings by women poets.  Alice Friman reads at The University of Georgia for Seat in the Shade: Summer Poetry Reading Series, while Alice Notley comes to you from The University of Chicago in a reading sponsored by the Renaissance Society.  Links to the collections read from by both Alices follow the videos. 

 

 

 

 

 

11711

97801431189309780819569561

 

 

 

 

 

 

Purchase Vinculum at LSU Press.

Culture of One available at Penguin/Random House.

Songs and Stories of the Ghouls from Wesleyan University Press.

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Hans Solo Jones: 2 by Amorak Huey for 2sday Poems

05 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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2sDay Poems, Amorak Huey, Han Solo Explains the Universe, Hyacinth Girl Press, Indian Jones mashup, pop culture poems, Portrait of My Brother As Indiana Jones, stars wars poem, The Insomniac Circus, Tupelo Quarterly

images.duckduckgo.com

Hans Solo Explains the Universe

Portrait of my Brother as Indiana Jones

 
large-cover-insomniac-circus
more about Amorak

buy his latest THE INSOMNIAC CIRCUS at hyacinth girl press

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Goats & Feathers: 2sDay Poems

16 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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2sDay Poems, Brigit Peegen Kelly, Feathers 4, Gail Wronsky, Light chaff and falling leaves or a pair of feathers, loss, Maria Gracey, Maria's Goat, Naomi McQuade, Song, women artists, women poets

images.duckduckgo.com

Maria’s Goat (Pastel)–Maria Gracey

 

 

“song” by Brigit peegen Kelly

 

Feathers 4--Naomi McQuade

Feathers 4 (Oil)–Naomi McQuade

 

“light chaff and falling leaves or a pair of feathers” by gail wronsky

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Lettuce Make 2sDay Poems

02 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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2sDay Poems, A History of Loss, Brad Geyer, Cynthia Camlin, Emma Bolden, HOOT postcard 39, lettuce poems, Passages North, Sixth Finch, Vibrant Material, Wish

 

Cynthia Camlin--Vibrant Material 1from SIXTH FINCH (FALL 2014)

Cynthia Camlin–Vibrant Material 1 from SIXTH FINCH (FALL 2014)

 

HOOT Postcard 39, December 2014–“Wish” by Brad Geyer

 

PASSAGES NORTH Issue 30–“A History of Loss” by emma bolden

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2sDay Poems for Science Types

28 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in 2sDay Poems

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2sDay Poems, Desmond Kon Zhicheng-Mingde, Glint Literary Journal, Imaginary Homelands, Laura Kolbe, o is for organism, Rattle Magazine, science biographies, sciency poetry collections, Scientist issue, Sometimes When I Leave the Lab, Winter Tangerine Review

static.squarespace.com

I.

At Winter Tangerine review (Imaginary homelands feature):

Sometimes When I Leave the Lab What’s Outside
by Laura Kolbe

 

 

header

II.

At glint literary Journal:

o is for organism
by desmond kon zhicheng-Mingde

 

 

 

***Want more science-themed poetry? See my Jan. post “Sciency” Poetry Collections !!

OR

Scientist yourself? Then consider submitting work to RATTLE’s “Scientist” Issue (Apr. 15, 2015 deadline).

 

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