Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (March 16, 2025)

 Friends! Several months have passed since our last session of Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee. My dear friend Tim asked me the other day if I was done doing it, as he would stop checking if that were the case. That's when I realized that I had entered a lapse of silence that I didn't want to signal an end to our poetry gatherings. 

So, thanks to Tim for lighting the candle and holding it close to my elbow. And thanks to you, listeners, for checking back in and finding me again. That is often the way of life, isn't it? Welcome to all of us. I hope that you find something in today's poems to take with you in the coming days. 

Cheers, 

Erin



Poems:

  • Not Early or Late by W.S. Merwin (from his book Garden Time)
  • My Other Dark by W.S. Merwin (from his book Garden Time)
  • The Peace of Wild Things by Wendell Berry (from his book The Peace of Wild Things)
  • The Want of Peace by Wendell Berry (from his book The Peace of Wild Things)
  • Two Watches by Mosab Abu Toha (from his book Forest of Noise)
  • See the Kites? by Mosab Abu Toha (from his book Forest of Noise)

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๐Ÿ Š Poetry sessions appear most every Sunday morning at https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (Thanksgiving 2024)

 Today is the fourth anniversary of Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee, which began during the pandemic when many people were not gathering for the holiday in order to preserve the health of others. Thanks to everyone who has continued to listen and who has checked in to hear today's selections. 

Cheers! 

Erin


Poems:
  • The Blackboard by W.S. Merwin (from his book Garden Time)
  • Fieldnotes on Carrying by Caroline Harper New (from her book A History of Half-Birds)
  • The Riveter by Ada Limรณn (from her book Bright Dead Things)
  • Mama Said Nothing Good by Tina Mozelle Braziel (from her book Known by Salt)
  • The Wild Geese by Wendell Berry (from his book The Peace of Wild Things)

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๐Ÿ Š Poetry sessions appear most every Sunday morning at https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, November 10, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (November 10, 2024)

It has been a hot minute since we met for coffee and poetry, but I'm glad we've found each other again. 

Poems:

  • Grace by Wendell Berry
  • The Burial of the Old by Wendell Berry
  • A Lake Scene by May Swenson (from Poetry, 91:5 Feb. 1958)
  • Old Moon River Moon by Susan Bright (from her book Atomic Basket)

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๐Ÿ Š Poetry sessions appear most every Sunday morning at https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, September 8, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (September 8, 2024)

Poems:

  • Rental Property by Ann Tweedy (from her book A Registry for Survival)
  • The Old Flame by Robert Lowell (from his book For the Union Dead)
  • Supplanting by Wendell Berry (from his book The Peace of Wild Things)
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๐Ÿ Š Poems appear most every Sunday morning at https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, July 14, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (July 14, 2024)

 

Poems:

  • Rumination by Phoebe Giannisi, tr. Brian Sweden (from Poetry, 224:4 July/August 2024)
  • Failing and Flying by Jack Gilbert (from Collected Poems)

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, June 2, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (June 2, 2024)


Poems:

  • The Noisiness of Sleep by Ada Limรณn (from her book Bright Dead Things)
  • Poem with a Missing Pilot by C.D. Wright (from her book Shallcross)
  • Making Church Glass Ours by Tina Mozelle Braziel (from her book Glass Cabin, cowritten with James Braziel)

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 


Sunday, April 28, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (April 28, 2024)

 

Poems:

  • Gravity
  • Chemise by Kay Ryan (from her book Say Uncle)
  • Slowness by Polly Buckingham (from her book River People)
  • portrait of the rain by Jan Wagner, trans. by David Keplinger (appears in Poetry, Volume 221: Number 1)

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (April 14, 2024)

 So glad to be back! And with these poems. Enjoy!

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (April 14, 2024)


Poems:

  • The Sun by Anne Sexton (from her collection Live or Die)
  • Moon Song for my mother by Caroline Harper New (from her collection A History of Half-Birds)
  • What Remains Grows Ravenous by Ada Limรณn (from her collection Bright Dead Things)

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (3/24/24)

It has been a hot minute since we last met up for good words by other people, but I'm glad that you've checked back to see if a new edition might be up. It is! It's a rainy day in my part of the world, and we are slogging toward April, but it's officially Spring, so that's a new word to think about being inside.

Poems:

  • "Whatever Gets The Hay Down to the Ponies" by Maya Jewell Zeller (from her book Out Takes/Glove Box)
  • The Riveter by Ada Limรณn (from her book Bright Dead Things)
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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, March 3, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (March 3, 2024)


Poems:
  • Sweethearts by C.L. O'Dell (from Poetry, March 2024 issue)
  • Stunt Double by Tomรกs Q. Morรญn (from Poetry, March 2024 issue)
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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, February 25, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (2/25/24)



Poems:

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (February 18, 2024)

 Thanks for checking in to see whether a new installment of poems is ready. It is! Hope you've found good poems by other people during the past few Sundays that we missed.


Poems:
  • Ubi sunt? by Laura Kasischke (from her book Where Now - New and Selected Poems)
  • Address to the Angels by Maxine Kumin (from her Selected Poems 1960-1990)
  • Sitting in a Small Screenhouse on a Summer Morning by James Wright (from his Collected Poems-1990)
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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, January 14, 2024

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (January 14, 2024)

Welcome back to this week's installment of Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee--our perfect excuse to gather and drink coffee while I read good poems by other people. 


Poems:
  • On the Floor by Humberto Ak'abal, trans. by Michael Bazzett from the Spanish (appears in Poetry, Jan/Feb 2024)
  • Mask by Regan Huff (appears in Poetry Jan/Feb 2024)
  • The Retrieval System by Maxine Kumin (from her Selected Poems 1960-1990)
  • Progress Report by Maxine Kumin (from her Selected Poems 1960-1990)
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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Yes, You Should Read Maxine Kumin's Selected Poems (1960-1990)

I’ve finished my first read of 2024 and a wonderful introduction to the year it was. Maxine Kumin’s Selected Poems (1960-1990) is an interesting growing of life and word over the thirty years. Many of the selections meditate on the farm and its animal inhabitants, especially her horses; there are the reflections on her father’s life and death, her uncles, a few on the loss of her best friend Anne Sexton. Much of the poetry deals with the contrast of those who need and those who have, and she often unravels time and memory to its beginnings with a kind of Lazarus touch.

By the time I reached her poems from The Retrieval System (1978), I was marking most every poem as one to return to—as her writing seems to reach a depth and solidity that previous selections were working toward.
Here is one of the poems I marked that she addresses to an adult daughter:

Seeing the Bones by Maxine Kumin
This year again the bruise-colored oak
hangs on eating my heart out
with its slow change, the leaves at last
spiraling end over end like your
letters home that fall Fridays
in the box at the foot of the hill
saying the old news, keeping it neutral.
You ask about the dog, fourteen years
your hero, deaf now as a turnip,
thin as kindling.
In junior high your biology class
boiled a chicken down into its bones
four days at a simmer in my pot,
then wired joint by joint
the re-created hen
in an anatomy project
you stayed home from, sick.
Thus am I afflicted, seeing the bones.
How many seasons walking
on fallen apples like pebbles in
the shoes of the Canterbury faithful
have I kept the garden up
with leaven of wood ash, kitchen leavings
and the sure reciprocation of horse dung?
How many seasons have the foals
come right or breeched in good time
turned yearlings, two-year-olds, and at three
clattered off in a ferment to the sales?
Your ponies, those dapple-gray kings
of the orchard, long gone to skeleton,
gallop across the landscape of my dreams.
I meet your father there, dead years before
you left us for a European career.
He is looping the loop on a roller coaster
called Mercy, he is calling his children in.
I do the same things day by day.
They steady me against the wrong turn,
the closed-ward babel of anomie.
This Friday your letter in thinnest blue
script alarms me. Weekly you grow
more British with your I shalls
and you’re off to Africa
or Everest, daughter of the file drawer,
citizen of no return. I give
your britches, long outgrown, to the crows,
your boots with a summer visit’s worth
of mud caked on them to the shrews
for nests if they will have them.
Working backward I reconstruct
you. Send me your baby teeth, some new
nail parings and a hank of hair
and let me do the rest. I’ll
set the pot to boil.

Like the strongest poems in the collection, or at least the ones I’m most drawn to, Kumin balances vivid imagery as she moves from present to past or vice versa. Similar to Wendell Berry’s necessary agrarian awareness of the seasons, Kumin marks time as a farmer—constantly made aware of death and birth, and the past repeating itself through to present, despite war, atomic bomb, farflung children, or long lost relatives. It snows, the mare is pregnant, she mows, the calves are hauled off to slaughter, her children age, and a grandchild is born--and through that tapestry thread the memories of the past, hers and the abstract larger one.
It’s an excellent collection of work, and I feel deeply connected to her now, as though I am rooted too on the East Coast on a rural New Hampshire hill. I recommend finding a copy for yourself to peruse. The poems invite rereading and like all good poetry, bring the brain to a meditative simmer that makes your own life one worth considering.

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Sunday, December 31, 2023

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (12/31/23)

 Welcome to the last Sunday and day of the year. Let's share poetry.


Poems:
  • The Pawnbroker by Maxine Kumin (from her Selected Poems 1960-1990)
  • The Wild Geese by W.S. Merwin (from his book Garden Time)

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 


Sunday, December 10, 2023

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (December 10, 2023)

We are two Sundays into December, and I think finally on a streak of poetry without dropping a Sunday. Thanks for joining me again for good poems by other people.

 

Poems:

  • The Blackboard by W.S. Merwin (from his book Garden Time)
  • This Compost by Walt Whitman (from Complete Poetry and Selected Prose, edited by James E. Miller, Jr.)

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Monday, December 4, 2023

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (December 3, 2023)

 

Reading good poems by other people most Sundays.

Today: 

  • He Writes by Kateryna Kalytko, trans. by Oksana Lutayshyna and Olena Jennings
  • [Less than a day before the beginning of war] by Kateryna Kalytko, trans. by Katie Farris and Ilya Kaminsky 
  • 1918 by Ostap Slyvynksy, trans. by Anton Tenser and Tatiana Filimonova

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, November 26, 2023

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (November 26, 2023)

Next week will bring us into December, and so I guess this is the last of our November poems for the year. 


Poems:
  • Everybody Lying on their Stomachs, Head Toward the Candle, Reading, Sleeping, Drawing by Gary Snyder (from his book No Nature)
  • Love’s Map by Donald Justice (from his book The Summer Anniversaries)
  • The Other House by W.S. Merwin (from his book Garden Time)

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, November 19, 2023

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (November 19, 2023)

Please excuse the background hum during the recording; my usual computer is broken and my desktop refuses to record quietly or with any manners whatsoever.

I'll have a special Thanksgiving Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee, so check back for more poems this coming Thursday.

 

Poems:

  • November by Maggie Dietz
  • Winter by Marie Ponsot
  • November by Billy Collins

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๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle 

Sunday, October 22, 2023

Wake to Words and Brew Some Coffee (October 22, 2023)

On Sundays I read good poems by other people. Here are today's.

 
Poems:
  • Storm King by Linda L. Beeman (from her book Wallace, Idaho)
  • Excerpts from Chris La Tray's book One Sentence Journal
  • How to Corner the Market on Horse Cadavers by Lindsay Sletten (from Poetry/October 2021)

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    ๐Ÿ Š Catch the live show Sunday mornings at some time-ish: https://www.facebook.com/erintpringle