When they bought a record player console
with sliding cabinet doors, my parents
treated it like their most prized
possession— something to throw
a flannel cover on when not in use,
in case the chill mountain air might warp
its wooden panels. The Impossible Dream
from The Man of La Mancha was my father's
favorite recording. He had the Jack Jones
and Johnny Mathis, and later the Frank
Sinatra version from the album That's Life.
He liked to sit in an armchair after dinner,
eyes closed as he listened to the singer's
voice pull up and up toward the unreachable,
as the music swelled like a wave on a dark
night pinpricked with stars inside
his chest. He told me Cervantes' story
of a man who charged at windmills, believing
they were giants; of how he vowed to fight
for the helpless and infirm. This
was a noble quest, he stressed— to
bear the unbearable sorrow and right
the unrightable wrong. I couldn't fathom
then what sorrows he could have been carrying,
what wrongs he might have needed to address.
He's been gone more than thirty years,
yet when the world feels tilted, I remember
how sure his voice sounded, as if
the dream— any dream— was within reach.
Inducted
In the morning most of my disease, that is, itching and pimples, were gone. In the morning visited by Mr. Coventry and others, and very glad I am to see that I am so much inquired after and my sickness taken notice of as I did. I keep my bed all day and sweat again at night, by which I expect to be very well to-morrow.
This evening Sir W. Warren came himself to the door and left a letter and box for me, and went his way. His letter mentions his giving me and my wife a pair of gloves; but, opening the box, we found a pair of plain white gloves for my hand, and a fair state dish of silver, and cup, with my arms, ready cut upon them, worth, I believe, about 18l., which is a very noble present, and the best I ever had yet.
So after some contentful talk with my wife, she to bed and I to rest.
in the morning my disease
and I were one
war came for me in a pair
of plain white gloves
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 10 February 1662/63.
Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 6
A personal selection of posts from the Poetry Blogging Network and beyond. Although I tend to quote my favorite bits, please do click through and read the whole posts. You can also browse the blog digest archive at Via Negativa or, if you’d like it in your inbox, subscribe on Substack (where the posts might be truncated by some email providers).
This week: beach cobbles, resonating surfaces, ambiguous texts, imaginary friends, and much more. Enjoy.
Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 6”Consumed
Could not rise and go to the Duke, as I should have done with the rest, but keep my bed and by the Apothecary’s advice, Mr. Battersby, I am to sweat soundly, and that will carry all this matter away which nature would of itself eject, but they will assist nature, it being some disorder given the blood, but by what I know not, unless it be by my late quantitys of Dantzic-girkins that I have eaten.
In the evening came Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten to see me, and Sir J. Minnes advises me to the same thing, but would not have me take anything from the apothecary, but from him, his Venice treacle being better than the others, which I did consent to and did anon take and fell into a great sweat, and about 10 or 11 o’clock came out of it and shifted myself, and slept pretty well alone, my wife lying in the red chamber above.
I am that matter which
nature would eject
given the quantities
that I have eaten
I am a thing no better
than others sent to sweat
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 9 February 1662/63.
Becoming
My friend shows me his arthritic
fingers, and I try to click my trigger
thumb. But he can't hear the noise
it makes because of the vacuum cleaner
sounds made by the tinnitus in his ear.
I suppose we're getting to the age
when we can start to tell the difference
between a dull hurt and a door that's
permanently closed, between the new-new
shine of chrome encasing a cheap plastic
interior and the unpolished gleam of a body
whose limp is louder than its mind. The world
loves words like résumé, strategic, and
effective positioning. It rewards the one
who hasn't even earned their name,
the one who hasn't stood at the edge of
an ultimatum or answered a call at midnight
which rearranged the entire plot of a life.
I sometimes take my graduation ring
out of its box and wear it, just to remind
myself I know some shit. I've learned
that forgive doesn't mean forget, but also
how shame burns hot at first but you can
learn to outlast it. Becoming is long, hard
work, and I know I only have these ordinary
days to build from, to cobble some light
even from failure for the rest of the path.
Cold
(Lord’s day). Up, and it being a very great frost, I walked to White Hall, and to my Lord Sandwich’s by the fireside till chapel time, and so to chappell, where there preached little Dr. Duport, of Cambridge, upon Josiah’s words, — “But I and my house, we will serve the Lord.” But though a great scholler, he made the most flat dead sermon, both for matter and manner of delivery, that ever I heard, and very long beyond his hour, which made it worse.
Thence with Mr. Creed to the King’s Head ordinary, where we dined well, and after dinner Sir Thomas Willis and another stranger, and Creed and I, fell a-talking; they of the errours and corruption of the Navy, and great expence thereof, not knowing who I was, which at last I did undertake to confute, and disabuse them: and they took it very well, and I hope it was to good purpose, they being Parliament-men. By and by to my Lord’s, and with him a good while talking upon his want of money, and ways of his borrowing some, &c., and then by other visitants, I withdrew and away, Creed and I and Captn. Ferrers to the Park, and there walked finely, seeing people slide, we talking all the while; and Captn. Ferrers telling me, among other Court passages, how about a month ago, at a ball at Court, a child was dropped by one of the ladies in dancing, but nobody knew who, it being taken up by somebody in their handkercher. The next morning all the Ladies of Honour appeared early at Court for their vindication, so that nobody could tell whose this mischance should be. But it seems Mrs. Wells fell sick that afternoon, and hath disappeared ever since, so that it is concluded that it was her.
Another story was how my Lady Castlemaine, a few days since, had Mrs. Stuart to an entertainment, and at night began a frolique that they two must be married, and married they were, with ring and all other ceremonies of church service, and ribbands and a sack posset in bed, and flinging the stocking; but in the close, it is said that my Lady Castlemaine, who was the bridegroom, rose, and the King came and took her place with pretty Mrs. Stuart. This is said to be very true. Another story was how Captain Ferrers and W. Howe both have often, through my Lady Castlemaine’s window, seen her go to bed and Sir Charles Barkeley in the chamber all the while with her. But the other day Captn. Ferrers going to Sir Charles to excuse his not being so timely at his arms the other day, Sir Charles swearing and cursing told him before a great many other gentlemen that he would not suffer any man of the King’s Guards to be absent from his lodging a night without leave. Not but that, says he, once a week or so I know a gentleman must go to his whore, and I am not for denying it to any man, but however he shall be bound to ask leave to lie abroad, and to give account of his absence, that we may know what guard the King has to depend upon.
The little Duke of Monmouth, it seems, is ordered to take place of all Dukes, and so to follow Prince Rupert now, before the Duke of Buckingham, or any else.
Whether the wind and the cold did cause it or no I know not, but having been this day or two mightily troubled with an itching all over my body which I took to be a louse or two that might bite me, I found this afternoon that all my body is inflamed, and my face in a sad redness and swelling and pimpled, so that I was before we had done walking not only sick but ashamed of myself to see myself so changed in my countenance, so that after we had thus talked we parted and I walked home with much ado (Captn. Ferrers with me as far as Ludgate Hill towards Mr. Moore at the Wardrobe), the ways being so full of ice and water by peoples’ trampling. At last got home and to bed presently, and had a very bad night of it, in great pain in my stomach, and in great fever.
frost and fire
ache up my head
my one-way body taken
sick into the sack
bridegroom to the window
not to the wind
the cold in my body
is inflamed
on my hill of ice
a night of great fever
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Sunday 8 February 1662/63.
The History of Weekends
My husband, who cooks on weekends,
goes on the internet to find out when
weekends became a thing. In ancient Rome,
every eighth day was market day. During
the Han dynasty, officials took every fifth
day off to rest and wash their hair.
In the early nineteenth century, factory
owners and laborers came to an agreement
that work could stop at two on Saturday
afternoon, as long as people would come
to work sober on Monday. It wasn't until
1940 that the Fair Labor Standards Act
formalized the forty-hour workweek
and the two-day weekend. Some people
wanted more time for beer, others
for prayers. Some people sit idling
at their desks, then promptly shut down
their computers at 5:01. It's as if
the ceiling had changed to a different
color. Some colleagues advise me to ignore
work email on weekends, even when my Inbox
column glows with insistent green dots
at 10 PM. My youngest daughter says,
productivity and optimalization are concepts
of the capitalist machine. Why shouldn't rest
also be legislated? Heat up leftovers, or make
a small meal from scratch. Make tea, write
in your notebook, make valentines with your
second-grader. Think of a nap as an achievement,
as well as the whole history behind your being where
you are: here, when it could have been otherwise.
Trimming the fat
Up and to my office, whither by agreement Mr. Coventry came before the time of sitting to confer about preparing an account of the extraordinary charge of the Navy since the King’s coming, more than is properly to be applied and called the Navy charge.
So by and by we sat, and so till noon. Then home to dinner, and in the afternoon some of us met again upon something relating to the victualling, and thence to my writing of letters late, and making my Alphabet to my new Navy book very pretty. And so after writing to my father by the post about the endeavour to come to a composition with my uncle, though a very bad one, desiring him to be contented therewith, I went home to supper and to bed.
I am preparing
an extraordinary rope
call the thin letters
in my alphabet
to a pretty position
with my I
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Saturday 7 February 1662/63.
Old timers
Up and to my office about business, examining people what they could swear against Field, and the whole is, that he has called us cheating rogues and cheating knaves, for which we hope to be even with him.
Thence to Lincoln’s Inn Fields; and it being too soon to go to dinner, I walked up and down, and looked upon the outside of the new theatre, now a-building in Covent Garden, which will be very fine. And so to a bookseller’s in the Strand, and there bought Hudibras again, it being certainly some ill humour to be so against that which all the world cries up to be the example of wit; for which I am resolved once again to read him, and see whether I can find it or no. So to Mr. Povy’s, and there found them at dinner, and dined there, there being, among others, Mr. Williamson, Latin Secretary, who, I perceive, is a pretty knowing man and a scholler, but, it may be, thinks himself to be too much so. Thence, after dinner, to the Temple, to my cozen Roger Pepys, where met us my uncle Thomas and his son; and, after many high demands, we at last came to a kind of agreement upon very hard terms, which are to be prepared in writing against Tuesday next. But by the way promising them to pay my cozen Mary’s legacys at the time of her marriage, they afterwards told me that she was already married, and married very well, so that I must be forced to pay it in some time.
My cozen Roger was so sensible of our coming to agreement that he could not forbear weeping, and, indeed, though it is very hard, yet I am glad to my heart that we are like to end our trouble. So we parted for to-night.
And I to my Lord Sandwich and there staid, there being a Committee to sit upon the contract for the Mole, which I dare say none of us that were there understood, but yet they agreed of things as Mr. Cholmely and Sir J. Lawson demanded, who are the undertakers, and so I left them to go on to agree, for I understood it not.
So home, and being called by a coachman who had a fare in him, he carried me beyond the Old Exchange, and there set down his fare, who would not pay him what was his due, because he carried a stranger with him, and so after wrangling he was fain to be content with 6d., and being vexed the coachman would not carry me home a great while, but set me down there for the other 6d., but with fair words he was willing to it, and so I came home and to my office, setting business in order, and so to supper and to bed, my mind being in disorder as to the greatness of this day’s business that I have done, but yet glad that my trouble therein is like to be over.
what cheating rogues we are
already married
to time
that hard heart
like a contract
none of us understood
who are old and strange
in words and days
done over
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Friday 6 February 1662/63.
Everyday Ciphers
There are rooms from which I know I departed
too quickly.
Displacement is its own unstable architecture.
I can never completely erase what was faint
if it was persistent to begin with.
When I take my first clear breath after illness,
the world smells both sharp and tender.
I remember echoes in stairwells, and streetcorners where
small flames were tended in the service of our hungers.
There are flowers that don't recognize boundaries.
We should learn from them that nothing wild is
ever made to be captive.
Breath can rise even from the cracked earth.

