Microchimeric

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
In the tissue-lined channels of my body, 
the cells of my children drift like lanterns.
They flicker with messages encoded long ago,
carrying bits of story that remain on this
side of the water. Outside, they row
in the wind through their own cartography,
sometimes returing to the port of their first
origins. Sometimes I am the lighthouse keeper,
and sometimes I am my own vessel, trying
like them to breach treacherous depths
to reach a calmer sea. Across the years
and all this distance, I want to believe
there is still a quiet hum of signals at
cellular level, and that as long as they
are there, none of us could ever be lost.

On leave

Sam Pepys and me

Lay chiding, and then pleased with my wife in bed, and did consent to her having a new waistcoate made her for that which she lost yesterday. So to the office, and sat all the morning. At noon dined with Mr. Coventry at Sir J. Minnes his lodgings, the first time that ever I did yet, and am sorry for doing it now, because of obliging me to do the like to him again. Here dined old Captn. Marsh of the Tower with us. So to visit Sir W. Pen, and then to the office, and there late upon business by myself, my wife being sick to-day. So home and to supper and to bed.

hiding in bed
a waist lost to time

I am sorry for
no use in me

like a cap of the pen
off by myself
if sick


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Thursday 29 January

The Child Sleeps

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
The child sleeps 
in his father's arms
still wearing the clothes
he was taken in. We pray

he can still dream
of bread and the soft
pillow on his own bed,
at home where someone

is trying to stitch
their fears into
marigolds and leaves.
We try to gather our

courage into kindling:
speaking and naming,
watching and witnessing.
We know we can hold

silence and words in
the same hand, that knees
can sing on the hard
streets packed

with snow. The child
sleeps with his mouth open.
Look at that kind of trust
his body still has.

Anti-arcana

Sam Pepys and me

Up and all the morning at my office doing business, and at home seeing my painterswork measured. So to dinner and abroad with my wife, carrying her to Unthank’s, where she alights, and I to my Lord Sandwich’s, whom I find missing his ague fit to-day, and is pretty well, playing at dice (and by this I see how time and example may alter a man; he being now acquainted with all sorts of pleasures and vanities, which heretofore he never thought of nor loved, nor, it may be, hath allowed) with Ned Pickering and his page Laud. Thence to the Temple to my cozen Roger Pepys, and thence to Serjt. Bernard to advise with him and retain him against my uncle, my heart and head being very heavy with the business. Thence to Wotton’s, the shoemaker, and there bought another pair of new boots, for the other I bought my last would not fit me, and here I drank with him and his wife, a pretty woman, they broaching a vessel of syder a-purpose for me. So home, and there found my wife come home, and seeming to cry; for bringing home in a coach her new ferrandin waistecoate, in Cheapside, a man asked her whether that was the way to the Tower; and while she was answering him, another, on the other side, snatched away her bundle out of her lap, and could not be recovered, but ran away with it, which vexes me cruelly, but it cannot be helped.
So to my office, and there till almost 12 at night with Mr. Lewes, learning to understand the manner of a purser’s account, which is very hard and little understood by my fellow officers, and yet mighty necessary. So at last with great content broke up and home to supper and bed.

painters work with light
who is playing with it

never loved nor allowed
in the temple

is my heavy shoe
a vessel of purpose

answering another
on the other side

a way out could be a way in
under the bed


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Wednesday 28 January

On Softening

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Days of freezing cold, nights
listening to sleet scratch vertical
dashes on the roof and windowpanes.
And yet, besides the tiny icicles
that hang from the limbs of the fig
tree, you've seen packed green nubs
that will purple into fruit in summer.
For now, every edge gleams sharp
as the grief of the mother scouring
the earth for the daughter taken into
the underworld. But even now, the light
is already changing. The hard,
packed earth softens after thaw.

Correspondence

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
In faded photographs you don't have 
but still clearly remember, everyone
is facing straight at the camera but not
smiling: uneasy truce after noisy
quarrels behind closed doors, lips
drawn tight as the secrets they took
with them into the grave. You can smell
the must of the grandmother's lace mantilla,
the wool of the father's coat. You can see
the carefully filed points of the mother's
nails, the veins that were starting to show
on her hands. Each of them could have been
a key to a row of doors, each of them
could have been a yellowed note slipped
into a secret pocket or the inside of a hem.
They've left, but now and again they appear
in dreams, in the sudden craving for a taste
from another time, in the lines of an old
song whose refrain seems familiar
though it was all before your time.

Gritty

Sam Pepys and me

Up and to the office, where sat till two o’clock, and then home to dinner, whither by and by comes Mr. Creed, and he and I talked of our Tangier business, and do find that there is nothing in the world done with true integrity, but there is design along with it, as in my Lord Rutherford, who designs to have the profit of victualling of the garrison himself, and others to have the benefit of making the Mole, so that I am almost discouraged from coming any more to the Committee, were it not that it will possibly hereafter bring me to some acquaintance of great men. Then to the office again, where very busy till past ten at night, and so home to supper and to bed.
I have news this day from Cambridge that my brother hath had his bachelor’s cap put on; but that which troubles me is, that he hath the pain of the stone, and makes bloody water with great pain, it beginning just as mine did. I pray God help him.

true grit
is for the mole

no men put on
the pain of the stone


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 27 January

Hung over

Sam Pepys and me

Up and by water with Sir W. Batten to White Hall, drinking a glass of wormewood wine at the Stillyard, and so up to the Duke, and with the rest of the officers did our common service; thence to my Lord Sandwich’s, but he was in bed, and had a bad fit last night, and so I went to Westminster Hall, it being Term time, it troubling me to think that I should have any business there to trouble myself and thoughts with. Here I met with Monsieur Raby, who is lately come from France. [He] tells me that my Lord Hinchingbroke and his brother do little improve there, and are much neglected in their habits and other things; but I do believe he hath a mind to go over as their tutour, and so I am not apt to believe what he says therein. But I had a great deal of very good discourse with him, concerning the difference between the French and the Pope, and the occasion, which he told me very particularly, and to my great content; and of most of the chief affairs of France, which I did enquire: and that the King is a most excellent Prince, doing all business himself; and that it is true he hath a mistress, Mademoiselle La Valiere, one of the Princess Henriette’s women, that he courts for his pleasure every other day, but not so as to make him neglect his publique affairs. He tells me how the King do carry himself nobly to the relations of the dead Cardinall, and will not suffer one pasquill to come forth against him; and that he acts by what directions he received from him before his death.
Having discoursed long with him, I took him by coach and set him down at my Lord Crew’s, and myself went and dined at Mr. Povy’s, where Orlando Massam, Mr. Wilks, a Wardrobe man, myself and Mr. Gawden, and had just such another dinner as I had the other day there.
But above all things I do the most admire his piece of perspective especially, he opening me the closett door, and there I saw that there is nothing but only a plain picture hung upon the wall.
After dinner Mr. Gauden and I to settle the business of the Tangier victualling, which I perceive none of them yet have hitherto understood but myself.
Thence by coach to White Hall, and met upon the Tangier Commission, our greatest business the discoursing of getting things ready for my Lord Rutherford to go about the middle of March next, and a proposal of Sir J. Lawson’s and Mr. Cholmely’s concerning undertaking the Mole, which is referred to another time.
So by coach home, being melancholy, overcharged with business, and methinks I fear that I have some ill offices done to Mr. Coventry, or else he observes that of late I have not despatched business so as I did use to do, which I confess I do acknowledge. But it may be it is but my fear only, he is not so fond as he used to be of me. But I do believe that Sir W. Batten has made him believe that I do too much crow upon having his kindness, and so he may on purpose to countenance him seem a little more strange to me, but I will study hard to bring him back again to the same degree of kindness.
So home, and after a little talk with my wife, to the office, and did a great deal of business there till very late, and then home to supper and to bed.

wormwood wine and I
had a bad fit

so I am not apt to eat
the dead today

nothing but a plain picture
hung upon the wall

a melancholy crow
having to study my supper


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 26 January 1662/63.

Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 4

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: falling snow, a broken country, walking on an icy sidewalk, the space in which to take a small breath, and much more. Enjoy.

Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2026, Week 4”

Memory of Martial Law Years, with Children

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Philippines


Those were years of darkness and silence
when we learned not to trust anything,

not even our shadows because they change
depending on the time of day. The man

in the clean, pressed shirt who sat
next to you in the jeepney, the teacher

who always had the latest hairstyle;
the auntie who sold rice and swamp spinach

at the corner, the man who ladled hot
crisped corn into paper sacks at the edge

of the school yard— our elders said we
couldn't trust anyone. Everyone was afraid,

because everyone could be bribed
or threatened or bought. We spoke

with our eyes or through the lean of our
bodies, taught each other codes for knocking

that meant friend or relative and not
foe. When the curfew sounded at nine,

we sat together with shades drawn, turned
down the volume on our radios. They seemed

to age before their time, but we helped
our children with homework and told them

to say their prayers before going to bed.
When we put their pencils and crayons away,

the sight of a brightly drawn yellow sun on
kraft paper was enough to rend our hearts.