Though they have the same plush, velvety look,
Marimo aren’t moss but a rare form of algae found
in freshwater lakes. Scientists say they're among
the first plants to have moved from water to land
over 500 million years ago, even outliving
dinosaurs. No wonder they manage to stay alive
for over a hundred years, though kept in glass bowls
filled with water and a bed of smooth stones instead
of out in the wild. The need for tangible softness
must be a trait passed on from one generation
to the next: somehow, part of the strategy for
surviving extremity— the open hand allowing
for flow in ways that a clenched fist
would not. Take kissing— mouth to mouth
contact not only for the purpose of passing
or masticating food— and how there’s evidence
neanderthals and humans kissed. And moss
spores taken into space, with little to no direct
contact with light, not only surviving but
germinating after returning to earth.
More than the Leaving
I was drinking my coffee when I felt
a familiar sensation— do you know it?
Like being naked but not exactly,
just because I forgot to put on
my favorite earrings. At the same time,
I remembered where I'd left them:
on the counter in my hotel room just
before I checked out at 3 in the morning,
anxious about Thanksgiving traffic and lines.
They were a pair of gold-colored, simple
circlets mounted on a stud. I am good
at remembering, but after the moment I was
supposed to remember. Maybe 6 years ago now,
I bought those earrings in the Portland
airport coming back from a writing conference.
33 years ago I remember waking my daughters
so they could see me off at my departure
from another airport. I did not have the heart
to wake the youngest, a toddler, from the depths
of heavy, blissful sleep. I hope they remember
things like this, more than the leaving.
Quiet time
In the morning to the Temple to my cozen Roger, who now desires that I would excuse him from arbitrating, he not being able to stand for me as he would do, without appearing too high against my uncle Thomas, which will raise his clamour. With this I am very well pleased, for I did desire it, and so I shall choose other counsel.
Thence home, he being busy that I could not speak more with him. All day long till twelve o’clock at night getting my house in order, my wife putting up the red hangings and bed in her woman’s chamber, and I my books and all other matters in my chamber and study, which is now very pretty. So to bed.
in the morning
no clamor with a clock
at night in my books
I study snow
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Wednesday 26 November 1662.
Trousseau
I heard someone say torch, and recalled
my friend's story about how, when her sister
was married, her new husband gathered all
her underwear and threw it into the fire.
This was supposed to show how his passion
for her meant all other loves before him
were to be incinerated. Some words eclipse
others in the wake of their arrival.
She received new ones, cotton and silk,
handpicked by him. There are other ways
in which partnerships become proclamations—
a binding with rings, an annexation with names.
What did our mothers surrender besides what fell
away like leaves, like trees stripped of bark.
Making do
Up and to the office all the morning, and at noon with the rest, by Mr. Holy, the ironmonger’s invitation, to the Dolphin, to a venison pasty, very good, and rare at this time of the year, and thence by coach with Mr. Coventry as far as the Temple, and thence to Greatorex’s, where I staid and talked with him, and got him to mend my pocket ruler for me, and so by coach to my Lord’s lodging, where I sat with Mr. Moore by appointment, making up accounts for my Lord Sandwich, which done he and I and Capt. Ferrers and W. Howe very merry a good while in the great dining room, and so it being late and my Lord not coming in, I by coach to the Temple, and thence walked home, and so to my study to do some business, and then home and to bed.
Great talk among people how some of the Fanatiques do say that the end of the world is at hand, and that next Tuesday is to be the day. Against which, whenever it shall be, good God fit us all.
in a holy time of year
I mend my pocket
and walk home
people say the end
of the world shall
befit us
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Tuesday 25 November 1662.
Time Travel
While I can still make out the figures in the grainy
print, I call them again to the surface. Life
is long, so love might outlast the distance.
You bend over me seated in a shiny red tricycle,
eager for the novelty of this kind of motion. Life
is long, and I'm eager to speed up the distance.
I still feel your hand on my back. A cool morning
in our northern hills, you in a slim sheath skirt. Life's
long fringes in the pines, love a hazy plume in the distance.
Daughter-mother-daughter: links in a chain that keeps
going. I can go faster, but must pedal harder. Life
is long; perhaps love will outlast the distance.
Every now and then my sealed heart's pried open—
a tomb I want to walk out of, toward the light. Life
is long, promising love will outlast the distance.
Poetry Blog Digest 2025, Week 47
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: gods of brokenness, a hollowed-out hosiery factory, end paper mood-matches, quokkas sleeping in the shade, and much more. Enjoy.
Continue reading “Poetry Blog Digest 2025, Week 47”Hydraulics
Under the surface—
Teeming channels and stations
Subterranean, subcutaneous
Liquids moving in
confined spaces, under pressure
transmitting equally in all directions
Our hearts have four chambers—
Seastars have no heart at all
Octopi have three and copper blood
Zebrafish can mend
their broken hearts in two months
The wood frog shuts down its heart in winter
Adaptable
Sir J. Minnes, Sir W. Batten, and I, going forth toward White Hall, we hear that the King and Duke are come this morning to the Tower to see the Dunkirk money. So we by coach to them, and there went up and down all the magazines with them; but methought it was but poor discourse and frothy that the King’s companions (young Killigrew among the rest) about the codpieces of some of the men in armour there to be seen, had with him. We saw none of the money, but Mr. Slingsby did show the King, and I did see, the stamps of the new money that is now to be made by Blondeau’s fashion, which are very neat, and like the King. Thence the King to Woolwich, though a very cold day; and the Duke to White Hall, commanding us to come after him, which we did by coach; and in his closett, my Lord Sandwich being there, did discourse with us about getting some of this money to pay off the Fleets, and other matters; and then away hence, and, it being almost dinner time, I to my Lord Crew’s, and dined with him, and had very good discourse, and he seemed to be much pleased with my visits. Thence to Mr. Phillips, and so to the Temple, where met my cozen Roger Pepys and his brother, Dr. John, as my arbitrators against Mr. Cole and Mr. John Bernard for my uncle Thomas, and we two with them by appointment. They began very high in their demands, and my friends, partly being not so well acquainted with the will, and partly, I doubt, not being so good wits as they, for which I blame my choosing of relations (who besides that are equally engaged to stand for them as me), I was much troubled thereat, and taking occasion to deny without my father’s consent to bind myself in a bond of 2000l. to stand to their award, I broke off the business for the present till I hear and consider further, and so thence by coach (my cozen, Thomas Pepys, being in another chamber busy all the while, going along with me) homeward, and I set him down by the way; but, Lord! how he did endeavour to find out a ninepence to clubb with me for the coach, and for want was forced to give me a shilling, and how he still cries “Gad!” and talks of Popery coming in, as all the Fanatiques do, of which I was ashamed. So home, finding my poor wife very busy putting things in order, and so to bed, my mind being very much troubled, and could hardly sleep all night, thinking how things are like to go with us about Brampton, and blaming myself for living so high as I do when for ought I know my father and mother may come to live upon my hands when all is done.
going forth this morning
with a froth of amour
on my lips as
they part to talk
of busy things
Erasure poem derived from The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Monday 24 November 1662.
Simplicity Itself
what if a loaf
split open in the oven
oh mouth
what if a love
were left out to ripen
under the moon
what if a leaf
let go the moment
the fetus kicked
what if a life
drew power from each
caught breath

