Push

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
There are days when you get 
some good traction and the load
you push, though it hasn't gotten
lighter, slides forward. But
there are other days when
the stone doesn't budge.
You make a notch in the earth
with your shoe or find some other
way to prop it up for a while,
so you can nap or go eat
chocolate-covered popcorn
and get your fingers sticky,
which means you'll have to wash up
at the sink, by which time you realize
what you actually want to do is take
a long, hot shower, use the bar of
jasmine soap you were saving for some
forgotten reason. Just a little
time to breathe without bracing
for the next thing to drop,
for the next addition to the weight
you never saw coming. You know
relief can come in the in-between,
uneven spaces, some mercy small
as a smile or a touch of a hand.
Though the weight hasn't grown lighter
you are trying to understand how it
doesn't necessarily mean you have failed
at the carrying, that your life isn't
just the color and shape of this stone.

Learned helplessness

Sam Pepys and me

Up and to the office, where we sat all the morning, and then home to dinner, and found it so well done, above what I did expect from my mayde Susan, now Jane is gone, that I did call her in and give her sixpence. Thence walked to the Temple, and there at my cozen Roger Pepys’s chamber met by appointment with my uncle Thomas and his son Thomas, and there I shewing them a true state of my uncle’s estate as he has left it with the debts, &c., lying upon it, we did come to some quiett talk and fair offers against an agreement on both sides, though I do offer quite to the losing of the profit of the whole estate for 8 or 10 years together, yet if we can gain peace, and set my mind at a little liberty, I shall be glad of it. I did give them a copy of this state, and we are to meet tomorrow with their answer.
So walked home, it being a very great frost still, and to my office, there late writing letters of office business, and so home to supper and to bed.

above what I expect
from one wing

lying quiet
I quit losing my mind

at the state we are
still in


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Thursday 5 February 1662/63
.

Wishes

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
I've been told to stop apologizing
for things over which no one has

any control. And yet, all these years,
I still can't stop saying I'm sorry

for the circumstances that made
the distances I thought we were

trying in our own way to bridge
now seem insurmountable. To say

I no longer want to have anything
to do with you
is a choice, just as

it is to say I would not close that
door completely. Every day, I fan

my wishes out like cards on the table.
That wherever you are, mornings

are gentle and the winds warm; that you
understand your name could never be

spoken in anger. That remembrance
walks behind us quietly, but following.

Schooling

Sam Pepys and me

Up early and to Mr. Moore, and thence to Mr. Lovell about my law business, and from him to Paul’s School, it being Apposition-day there. I heard some of their speeches, and they were just as schoolboys’ used to be, of the seven liberal sciences; but I think not so good as ours were in our time. Away thence and to Bow Church, to the Court of Arches, where a judge sits, and his proctors about him in their habits, and their pleadings all in Latin. Here I was sworn to give a true answer to my uncle’s libells, and so paid my fee for swearing, and back again to Paul’s School, and went up to see the head forms posed in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, but I think they did not answer in any so well as we did, only in geography they did pretty well: Dr. Wilkins and Outram were examiners. So down to the school, where Dr. Crumlum did me much honour by telling many what a present I had made to the school, shewing my Stephanus, in four volumes, cost me 4l. 10s. He also shewed us, upon my desire, an old edition of the grammar of Colett’s, where his epistle to the children is very pretty; and in rehearsing the creed it is said “borne of the cleane Virgin Mary.” Thence with Mr. Elborough (he being all of my old acquaintance that I could meet with here) to a cook’s shop to dinner, but I found him a fool, as he ever was, or worse. Thence to my cozen Roger Pepys and Mr. Phillips about my law businesses, which stand very bad, and so home to the office, where after doing some business I went home, where I found our new mayde Mary, that is come in Jane’s place.

up early to school
a time of lead

I was sworn to answer bells
to answer present

school cost me
the child I was


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Wednesday 4 February 1662/63
.

Table manners

Sam Pepys and me

To the office all the morning, at noon to dinner, where Mr. Creed dined with me, and Mr. Ashwell, with whom after dinner I discoursed concerning his daughter coming to live with us. I find that his daughter will be very fit, I think, as any for our turn, but the conditions I know not what they will be, he leaving it wholly to her, which will be agreed on a while hence when my wife sees her. After an hour’s discourse after dinner with them, I to my office again, and there about business of the office till late, and then home to supper and to bed.

to dine well is to live

I will be fit as an urn

I will be who my wife
sees at supper


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 3 February

Expiration Date

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
The main character in a Dutch
movie announces to everyone:

this is the day she is going
to die. She lies down in her own

bed without a fuss, untroubled,
certain of what will happen.

Perhaps she is done with all
the negotiations, all the upkeep

that life requires of her— done
with farming and raising children,

done with chasing and refusing
sex, patching up quarrels, standing

up to injustice, stretching a pay-
check, bulking up a meal. Done

too with the Sunday suppers in
the garden, the long, earnest

conversations with friends deep
into the night. But how did she know,

how does anyone know? It's not like you're
given a ticket or schedule, a station or

terminal. It's not like a clock on the mantel
that you can hear winding down. But some insist

you will know when it's time— perhaps
when the floating world grows even more

transparent, every bubble brightening
imperceptibly just as it starts to dissolve.

Waxen

Sam Pepys and me

Up, and after paying Jane her wages, I went away, because I could hardly forbear weeping, and she cried, saying it was not her fault that she went away, and indeed it is hard to say what it is, but only her not desiring to stay that she do now go.
By coach with Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten to the Duke; and after discourse as usual with him in his closett, I went to my Lord’s: the King and Duke being gone to chappell, it being collar-day, it being Candlemas-day; where I staid with him a while until towards noon, there being Jonas Moore talking about some mathematical businesses, and thence I walked at noon to Mr. Povey’s, where Mr. Gawden met me, and after a neat and plenteous dinner as is usual, we fell to our victualling business, till Mr. Gawden and I did almost fall out, he defending himself in the readiness of his provision, when I know that the ships everywhere stay for them.
Thence Mr. Povey and I walked to White Hall, it being a great frost still, and after a turn in the Park seeing them slide, we met at the Committee for Tangier, a good full Committee, and agreed how to proceed in the dispatching of my Lord Rutherford, and treating about this business of Mr. Cholmely and Sir J. Lawson’s proposal for the Mole.
Thence with Mr. Coventry down to his chamber, where among other discourse he did tell me how he did make it not only his desire, but as his greatest pleasure, to make himself an interest by doing business truly and justly, though he thwarts others greater than himself, not striving to make himself friends by addresses; and by this he thinks and observes he do live as contentedly (now he finds himself secured from fear of want), and, take one time with another, as void of fear or cares, or more, than they that (as his own termes were) have quicker pleasures and sharper agonies than he.
Thence walking with Mr. Creed homewards we turned into a house and drank a cup of Cock ale and so parted, and I to the Temple, where at my cozen Roger’s chamber I met Madam Turner, and after a little stay led her home and there left her, she and her daughter having been at the play to-day at the Temple, it being a revelling time with them.
Thence called at my brother’s, who is at church, at the buriall of young Cumberland, a lusty young man.
So home and there found Jane gone, for which my wife and I are very much troubled, and myself could hardly forbear shedding tears for fear the poor wench should come to any ill condition after her being so long with me.
So to my office and setting papers to rights, and then home to supper and to bed. This day at my Lord’s I sent for Mr. Ashwell, and his wife came to me, and by discourse I perceive their daughter is very fit for my turn if my family may be as much for hers, but I doubt it will be to her loss to come to me for so small wages, but that will be considered of.

weeping away
a hard candle
out at noon

where we all fall
for quicker pleasures
and sharper agonies of art

who is at the burial
shedding tears
as I turn small


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 2 February

The Body as Source of Light

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
A thousand meters deep
in the zone called mesopelagic,
a lanternfish lifts its tiny row
of photophores, offering to slip it
into the ocean's voluminous sleeves.
Nightly it rises toward the surface
to feed on plankton. By itself,
its gleam is a sliver. But millions
of them shimmer the water with
tinfoil. Their light is endogenous—
meaning they produce it with their own
bodies. What an astonishment: to find
inside of us two sticks or flint and steel,
what it might take to start a flame.

Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 5

Poetry Blogging Network

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: yellow plastic whistles, white matter, inhabiting unfamiliar thoughts, eating ice, and much more. Enjoy.

Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 5”

The disco clam lights up

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
 
from the quartz synthesized in its body.

When danger approaches, strobe lights
bounce from one side of its crimson mantle

to the other, like a disco ball. Don't
eat me
, it seems to say— not in the middle

of my party, and you're not invited
. Perhaps
this is another way to live one more day—

to stun with the unexpected, startle instead
of cower and hide. Sometimes the chain of tiny

adrenaline synapses fires up inside us,
so that we step forward instead of back

even when we're frightened. Performance
and technique, but also timing. In front

of such astonishment, the chance for reprieve,
even applause, in a dark ocean full of teeth.