Hunger Wakes Me

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
In the hours between midnight and morning
I dream of shadowed hills, the scent of night-
blooming datura spilling over our old home.

What was the question that nudged
me awake, that I know still
has no answer?

I have a memory of pork
smoked over embers, the mumbled
prayers of mambunong, rice

wine scattered on the ground
for blessing; knives slicing meat
to dress in a bowl with lime and pepper.

My tongue is always bathed
with longing. Daughter, I can't remember
anymore what it was that severed

us from each other. The language
for what I want to say scrolls
into the ether but its root

is still there. I want to believe
the broth hasn't cooled. I want to believe
we still drink from the same bowl.

Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 1

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: wolf moons, egg-life, the voice of a middle-aged witch, a linear accelerator in a radiation bunker, and much more. Enjoy.

Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 1”

Wonders of the World

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Someone counted to seven, then
stopped. The great pyramid, the hanging
gardens of Babylon, a statue of Zeus.

The Temple of Artemis, the Colossus
of Rhodes, the Lighthouse at Alexandria,
the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus.

Such grandeur. But how does the tiniest snail
never scrape its head on the lintel no matter
how many times it goes in and out the door?

Who taught the tuberose and the night
phlox to dress themselves with scent
after the sun goes down?

While you sleep, your brain eats up
the debris it creates from doing all
the complex things it does.

A chicken was nearly beheaded
by an axe which missed its jugular
and most of the brain stem.

For over a year it was fed
with an eyedropper through
the odd-shaped hole in its neck.

Thousands of exhausting miles
from the sea, salmon and trout
struggle upstream to spawn.

Something about home— Wonder
in the ordinary stones, the astonishment
at how much the body can remember.

Cured

Sam Pepys and me

(Lord’s day). Up and to church, where a lazy sermon, and so home to dinner to a good piece of powdered beef, but a little too salt. At dinner my wife did propound my having of my sister Pall at my house again to be her woman, since one we must have, hoping that in that quality possibly she may prove better than she did before, which I take very well of her, and will consider of it, it being a very great trouble to me that I should have a sister of so ill a nature, that I must be forced to spend money upon a stranger when it might better be upon her, if she were good for anything.
After dinner I and she walked, though it was dirty, to White Hall (in the way calling at the Wardrobe to see how Mr. Moore do, who is pretty well, but not cured yet), being much afeard of being seen by anybody, and was, I think, of Mr. Coventry, which so troubled me that I made her go before, and I ever after loitered behind. She to Mr. Hunt’s, and I to White Hall Chappell, and then up to walk up and down the house, which now I am well known there, I shall forbear to do, because I would not be thought a lazy body by Mr. Coventry and others by being seen, as I have lately been, to walk up and down doing nothing. So to Mr. Hunt’s, and there was most prettily and kindly entertained by him and her, who are two as good people as I hardly know any, and so neat and kind one to another. Here we staid late, and so to my Lord’s to bed.

a lazy piece
of powdered beef

a salt cure
for a lazy body

doing nothing to eat
one another


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Sunday 4 January 1662/63.

Here, Now

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Your life is a length of cloth
whose measure you can’t
calculate. Your shape has changed
so many times: at sixth grade, when you
turned eighteen, before childbirth, after
childbirth, when your eldest child reached
the same age you were when you remarried.

Or it is a labyrinth of rooms filled
with various artifacts— birthday candles,
a pair of orthopedic shoes, braces;
communion veil, mismatched socks.
You find your mother’s recipe for soup
but not for fruitcake, her thimble
and needle threader but not
her sewing machine.

Nights, in winter, you stand at the counter
sifting flour, measuring salt and sugar,
proofing the dough. It takes time
for bread to rise, and no time at all for it
to be sliced, toasted, eaten. You roll pork into
a log studded with eggs, sausages, raisins.
How else will you be remembered
besides through taste?

Lately, departure has been on everyone’s minds.
The news is thick with war and terror, the deaths
of young and old. It takes effort to declare
I just want to survive, even more to live it. When
you press your mouth against another’s and say
Good night or Good morning, how simple
it feels, this belief that small, ordinary
things might still save us.

Age of extinction

Sam Pepys and me

Up and to the office all the morning, and dined alone with my wife at noon, and then to my office all the afternoon till night, putting business in order with great content in my mind. Having nothing now in my mind of trouble in the world, but quite the contrary, much joy, except only the ending of our difference with my uncle Thomas, and the getting of the bills well over for my building of my house here, which however are as small and less than any of the others. Sir W. Pen it seems is fallen very ill again.
So to my arithmetique again to-night, and so home to supper and to bed.

with all the nothing
now in the world

how small others seem
fallen to arithmetic


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Saturday 3 January 1662/63.

Soup

Sam Pepys and me

Lay long in bed, and so up and to the office, where all the morning alone doing something or another. So dined at home with my wife, and in the afternoon to the Treasury office, where Sir W. Batten was paying off tickets, but so simply and arbitrarily, upon a dull pretence of doing right to the King, though to the wrong of poor people (when I know there is no man that means the King less right than he, or would trouble himself less about it, but only that he sees me stir, and so he would appear doing something, though to little purpose), that I was weary of it. At last we broke up, and walk home together, and I to see Sir W. Pen, who is fallen sick again. I staid a while talking with him, and so to my office, practising some arithmetique, and so home to supper and bed, having sat up late talking to my poor wife with great content.

soup alone
in the afternoon

simply to stir
some little purpose

broke and sick
and having to eat


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Friday 2 January 1662/63.

Ride

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
The new year is a horse neighing in the field,
ready to race toward the future.

It wants me to slide into the saddle and leave
my baggage behind.

A gate swings open on hinges of light.

When we step through, the press and weight
of yesterday is still palpable in my arms—

persimmons and figs reddening in summer,
wind tearing every leaf off the trees in fall.

Sometimes ice and snow but mostly sleet,
driftwood, and packed sand on the shore.

On one side is the river, and on the other
trains travel the rails carrying coal.

I don’t know what the horse wants or if it wants
the same things I do but it carves tracks in the ground.

There is no standing still.

Perhaps our breaths, braided together,
will carry us toward whatever comes next.

Abide

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Listen. It's only the second day of the year
but a page has already turned. Whose hand

is going to write the record of what you
vowed to fulfill? Once, you walked into

mornings sharp with mountain cold, ears
tuned for the sound of your ancestors'

voices. Their words bronze dust motes
spinning from cracked rafters, their touch

strokes a sweet film on the surface of rice
in cooking pots. This milk is light

enough for babies' tongues. Evenings are rooms
filled with the heaviness of clouds— they gather

what spills from your eyes, into your hands, and
every secret pocket in your clothes. Now they want

to collect more of your thinning hair, plant
the ache of a seed which knows there are fewer

and fewer seasons ahead. Even so, they promise:
your heart will still know all manner of overflow.

Game show

Sam Pepys and me

Lay with my wife at my Lord’s lodgings, where I have been these two nights, till 10 o’clock with great pleasure talking, then I rose and to White Hall, where I spent a little time walking among the courtiers, which I perceive I shall be able to do with great confidence, being now beginning to be pretty well known among them.
Then to my wife again, and found Mrs. Sarah with us in the chamber we lay in. Among other discourse, Mrs. Sarah tells us how the King sups at least four or [five] times every week with my Lady Castlemaine; and most often stays till the morning with her, and goes home through the garden all alone privately, and that so as the very centrys take notice of it and speak of it.
She tells me, that about a month ago she quickened at my Lord Gerard’s at dinner, and cried out that she was undone; and all the lords and men were fain to quit the room, and women called to help her.
In fine, I find that there is nothing almost but bawdry at Court from top to bottom, as, if it were fit, I could instance, but it is not necessary; only they say my Lord Chesterfield, groom of the stole to the Queen, is either gone or put away from the Court upon the score of his lady’s having smitten the Duke of York, so as that he is watched by the Duchess of York, and his lady is retired into the country upon it. How much of this is true, God knows, but it is common talk.
After dinner I did reckon with Mrs. Sarah for what we have eat and drank here, and gave her a crown, and so took coach, and to the Duke’s House, where we saw “The Villaine” again; and the more I see it, the more I am offended at my first undervaluing the play, it being very good and pleasant, and yet a true and allowable tragedy. The house was full of citizens, and so the less pleasant, but that I was willing to make an end of my gaddings, and to set to my business for all the year again tomorrow. Here we saw the old Roxalana in the chief box, in a velvet gown, as the fashion is, and very handsome, at which I was glad.
Hence by coach home, where I find all well, only Sir W. Pen they say ill again. So to my office to set down these two or three days’ journall, and to close the last year therein, and so that being done, home to supper, and to bed, with great pleasure talking and discoursing with my wife of our late observations abroad.

beginning again
the show and tell

as we all watch
a common crow

set the year in a box
as if down to the last one


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Thursday 1 January 1662/63.