In the mountains

Sam Pepys and me

Within all day long, helping to put up my hangings in my house in my wife’s chamber, to my great content. In the afternoon I went to speak to Sir J. Minnes at his lodgings, where I found many great ladies, and his lodgings made very fine indeed.
At night to supper and to bed: this night having first put up a spitting sheet, which I find very convenient. This day come the King’s pleasure-boats from Calais, with the Dunkirk money, being 400,000 pistols.

within my amber tent
a peak

lodging where
I found a lodging

night having come
from a pistol


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Friday 21 November 1662.

Pauper’s Purse

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
I am poor and I owe
an incalculable debt
to the world— I have taken
more than my share of what
it has given, and still
it does not begrudge another
chance to secure my so-called
fortune. I owe a debt to my
friends, who puzzle, together
with me, the ledger figures
in our shared accounting of
this life. On one side, I am
still short of a complete
reckoning, a clearing of
the slate. On the other,
the hourglass sheds its
crystals at a faster rate.
It has a narrow waist
that reminds me of a certain
ache that falls somewhere
between needing more and
wanting less, that at some
point it will start its motion
all over again, not out
of meanness or spite
but because that is its
nature. And I am rich with
a surplus, always, of feeling.
There is so much, I often
don’t know what to do with it;
and other times, it saves me
from thinking I am completely
bereft, empty as a pauper’s purse.

Invasive

Sam Pepys and me

All the morning sitting at the office, at noon with Mr. Coventry to the Temple to advise about Field’s, but our lawyers not being in the way we went to St. James’s, and there at his chamber dined, and I am still in love more and more with him for his real worth. I broke to him my desire for my wife’s brother to send him to sea as a midshipman, which he is willing to agree to, and will do it when I desire it. After dinner to the Temple, to Mr. Thurland; and thence to my Lord Chief Baron, Sir Edward Hale’s, and back with Mr. Thurland to his chamber, where he told us that Field will have the better of us; and that we must study to make up the business as well as we can, which do much vex and trouble us: but I am glad the Duke is concerned in it. Thence by coach homewards, calling at a tavern in the way (being guided by the messenger in whose custody Field lies), and spoke with Mr. Smith our messenger about the business, and so home, where I found that my wife had finished very neatly my study with the former hangings of the diningroom, which will upon occasion serve for a fine withdrawing room. So a little to my office and so home, and spent the evening upon my house, and so to supper and to bed.

is a field in love with the sea
as a ship is with land

where will we make war
whose home will serve


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Thursday 20 November 1662.

What Parts of the Body Burn in Cremation?

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
~ after "The Funeral of Shelley," Louis Edouard Fournier; 1889


Soft tissue, mostly.
Hair, skin, nails, muscles,
organs. All the water of the body
turns to vapor. Some parts of teeth
survive the heat, though gums liquefy
as pulp. Bone fragments can also survive;
and the jaw, the skull. In Fournier's
picture, Mary Shelley kneels in the sand,
hands crossed over her breast. Byron,
Trelawney and Hunt argue over the charred
bit of muscle that surprisingly survives
the fire— but Mary gets to keep what was
believed to be her poet-husband's calcified
heart, after he drowned and was cremated
on a beach in Viareggio. She wrapped it in
a bit of silk or linen and some pages of
his poetry. It lay in her drawer until
its discovery after her death.

14 Years!

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
I don't remember what I was doing the year I turned 14.
Besides school, I mean. I was not yet in high school, but
I know my parents were talking about transferring me out
of the Catholic school I'd attended since kindergarten.
My father in particular wanted me to go to the University
of the Philippines high school in our city, because he
himself was a U.P. (Law School) graduate, and because
he claimed he was willing to risk my becoming an atheist
as long as it meant I could get a good education, one
that would teach me how to use my mind.

We were a family of avid readers, but changing schools
did make a difference— I felt more challenged, among my
new cohort who were not only smart but also (I thought)
seemed so much more worldly and cool in comparison to
my awkward self. Super introverted, I didn't talk much
unless called on. But even then, I knew I was good
with words. I knew that I wanted to write, though I
wasn't quite sure what that meant, back then.

Before I transferred high schools, a previous
teacher had given our class an oral test on metaphor;
I failed it, I think not because of a complete lack
of understanding, but because the premises were not
correct. That teacher had us take turns looking at
a simple watercolor (mountains, trees) on her desk,
and asked us to think of metaphors (remember, no "like"
or "as"). Everyone else seemed to have no lack of things
to say, which also meant they were totally spin-doctoring
the assignment. When it was my turn, I looked at the flat
watercolor which had no nuance or detail. I said, It's just
a mountain and some trees.


Despite that seemingly inauspicious experience, my path
has led to where I am today— and I feel so very grateful
and lucky that I'm able to do what I love best— write
and teach writing and literature, talk poetry and writing
with students and colleagues and a community of writing
friends both where I am and through virtual connection—
many of these thanks to Via Negativa and Dave Bonta,
for the space he's shared here where I've kept a daily
writing practice (writing and posting at least) a poem
a day for the last 14 years.

This daily practice has allowed me to put at least 4 books
and chapbooks together. More importantly, it's given me
so many kinds of insight about myself and my writing; it's
the high point of every day, and it's here where I get
excited about trying new things or mulling over
returning questions.

Here's to the next 14 - and more.

Bluebeard’s castle

Sam Pepys and me

At home all the morning, putting some of my goods in order in my house; and after dinner, the like in the afternoon. And in the evening to my office, and there till 11 a-clock at night upon my Lord Treasurer’s letter again, and so home to bed.

I put my goods
in order after dinner

like thee my lock
my treasure in a bed


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Wednesday 19 November 1662.

Out of the Depths

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
How does God look 
into the hearts of humans—

Is that kind of seeing like a scope
whose end has a tiny

camera the doctor guided up
your nose, past the twin

clappers of the larynx
that vibrate when air passes

through them with breath, then down
into the esophagus? I watched

on the monitor its progress through
that smooth, pink tunnel, but even

an instrument for enhanced seeing has
its limits. A friend described his

cardiac catheterization: a thin tube threaded
through a blood vessel in the arm or groin,

for replacement of a heart valve without
need for surgery. What is a prod

without a goad, an eye in front of a mirror,
a lure without the dream of a body

weaving through depths of water?
It's difficult to unsee what has been

seen and cherished, difficult not to want
to make sure the beloved is safely following

out of the depths. Why make our hearts this breakable,
only to prove that only one of us can win?

Anniversary

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
When we arrived, there was only one chair in the upper room, 
and a square of sunlight.

Isn't it endearing, that prelude before the camera picks up
the details? You can see how slow time is even as it lapses.

The hairline fissure in the corner is patched with plaster.

It is a known fact that even houses shift and breathe.

November again, and here ground is stitched with
the shadows of leaves.

For weeks now, after trash pickup, we've found our bins
on the other side of the street. A neighbor wants to start
a petition to address this.

We have a twelve-year-old bottle of wine that still sits
unopened on the rack.

Nothing was promised to us though we made promises.

Perhaps the tiny diamond that loosened from
its prongs winks somewhere under the floorboards.

Last week the skies glowed a deep magenta shot through
with green— like blown glass tempered with gold salts and
metal oxides.

Writing life

Sam Pepys and me

Up and to the office, where Mr. Phillip the lawyer came to me, but I put him off to the afternoon. At noon I dined at Sir W. Batten’s, Sir John Minnes being here, and he and I very kind, but I every day expect to pull a crow with him about our lodgings. My mind troubled about Gosnell and my law businesses. So after dinner to Mr. Phillips his chamber, where he demands an abatement for Piggott’s money, which vexes me also, but I will not give it him without my father’s consent, which I will write to him to-night about, and have done it. Here meeting my uncle Thomas, he and I to my cozen Roger’s chamber, and there I did give my uncle him and Mr. Philips to be my two arbiters against Mr. Cole and Punt, but I expect no great good of the matter.
Thence walked home, and my wife came home, having been abroad to-day, laying out above 12l. in linen, and a copper, and a pot, and bedstead, and other household stuff, which troubles me also, so that my mind to-night is very heavy and divided.
Late at my office, drawing up a letter to my Lord Treasurer, which we have been long about, and so home, and, my mind troubled, to bed.

being here every day
a crow without trouble

a pig without fat
I will write one line

and behold
troubles heavy as my bed


Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 18 November 1662.

Guest Room, with Lines from Rumi

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
We clear out boxes, odds and ends of the years 
crammed into a space for transients: everything

we couldn't then bear to part with or throw
away, taking up space in each corner. Without

a garage, even leftover paint cans from touchups
of exterior siding are here; the binders I put

together for my last appointment review, our
daughter's first pair of shoes. A one-burner

camping stove, Christmas lights, rechargeable
batteries for the weed-whacker. Light from the east-

facing window only touches the headboard through
gaps in the blinds. Below the south-facing window,

the heater keeps up its whooshing strain. Are we
clearing things out for some new delight? Rumi says

we should be grateful for whoever comes, because
each has been sent as a guide from beyond.