I try deciphering the sky's patterns:
what blue means against grey, how much
white gathers over rust-colored hills
at which time of day, before night
plunges everything into uniform
darkness. Homebound during power
outages as storms lashed at windows,
to pass the hours sometimes we'd spin
cerveza bottles on the table when we
played cards, told fortunes, or asked
questions answerable by yes or no.
Who its amber neck pointed to
as it came to rest was the lucky or
unlucky one. But the future is never
a transparent sheet— more like a plain
brown manila envelope with a seal
that someone shoves under the door
with a warning not to open it until
it's time. But when is the right time,
and what will you find should you open
the flap and bring its contents nearer
the blue flame to read what it says?
Daemonic
Up and find myself pretty well, and so to the office, and there all the morning. Rose at noon and home to dinner in my green chamber, having a good fire. Thither there came my wife’s brother and brought Mary Ashwell with him, whom we find a very likely person to please us, both for person, discourse, and other qualitys. She dined with us, and after dinner went away again, being agreed to come to us about three weeks or a month hence. My wife and I well pleased with our choice, only I pray God I may be able to maintain it.
Then came an old man from Mr. Povy, to give me some advice about his experience in the stone, which I [am] beholden to him for, and was well pleased with it, his chief remedy being Castle soap in a posset.
Then in the evening to the office, late writing letters and my Journall since Saturday, and so home to supper and to bed.
in my green fire
I am ash
person to person other
qualities come out
if our only god
may be an old man
give me some stone to cast
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Thursday 12 February 1662/63.
Canker
Took a clyster in the morning and rose in the afternoon. My wife and I dined on a pullet and I eat heartily, having eat nothing since Sunday but water gruel and posset drink, but must needs say that our new maid Mary has played her part very well in her readiness and discretion in attending me, of which I am very glad.
In the afternoon several people came to see me, my uncle Thomas, Mr. Creed, Sir J. Minnes (who has been, God knows to what end, mighty kind to me and careful of me in my sickness). At night my wife read Sir H. Vane’s tryall to me, which she began last night, and I find it a very excellent thing, worth reading, and him to have been a very wise man.
So to supper and to bed.
a rose in the heart
having no sun must
need tending
who knows what
kind of night began
as a cell
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Wednesday 11 February 1662/63.
The Windlass
Today it's Thursday. Wasn't it just
Monday? Everything's moving too fast.
Every day seems to bring some new
betrayal of what we want to keep.
Buses and trains leave the station,
but at least they return. The neighbor's
dog barks when the postman brings the mail,
yet I haven't heard from you. It's been
nearly five years. Still, I collect
flickers of things— the shadow of leaves
on the trellis. Small, hard buds
emerging from nodes on the fig tree,
though the rest of it is still
shrouded in winter sleep. Evening
is a well into which the dark pours,
so we can pull it up just one small pail
at a time. But time, time is the windlass
to which all things— and we— are lashed.
Early Warning Systems
My ancestors knew how to listen
for sound before it even became
sound— for the tremor in the forest
canopy before seeds helicoptered
to the ground, for the rip in the air
through which a faraway storm first
tested its breath. It's a listening
that begins in the gut, that room
in the body where they knew
interrogations take place under
a naked light bulb swinging
from a scaffold of bone.
They learned to trust the call
of shrikes in the field, slugs
shriveling into themselves
at the first whiff of toxins in
the air. When I pause mid-breath
without even knowing why, it must be
their presence alerting me to the smell
of smoke, from having lived through past
fires. Obeying intuition, the body inks
a more visible map through minefields,
as if to signal that danger itself should
step aside from knowing we've seen it.
Impossible Dream
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.

