Saturday, March 21, 2026

In What We Take for Matter, Seers Found—and Find Still— Abundance of Meaning

 

O soft suspension—beyond
the street-screens of noise,
beyond the whirling dust—
there—is it still

poetry and love,
radiant, revealed—
a painting made of breath,
gladly at rest in a gentle glide?

How could anyone
who has once tasted
this strange, other
pomegranate

ever run out
of bedded notes—
but, in rapture, return
to who one always was?

Of the Bars that Keep Music and Fate Honest and Straight (On the Origin of Su Shi's Name)

 

When Su Shi was born,
his father Su Xun wrote
“On Naming Two Sons,”
knowing a name can be
like a single note—

 

drawn from a lyre string
and let go by some god—
which, if rightly struck,
may sound as deep as anything
that resonates with the soul—

 

And so he wrote:
What is Shi?
A small crossbar
at the front of a carriage,

 

which accords balance
to the charioteer—
as does the nameless measure
to a musician and her melody
between sound and silence.

 

A slight bar preventing
the rider from falling
and straying out of place—
not unlike the bar in music,
holding running notes—

Friday, March 20, 2026

Vladimir Suchan, Orphean Nostoi, Book II of the Songs before the Gaze, available both in paperback and in e-book

Vladimir Suchan, Orphean Nostoi, Book II of the Songs before the Gaze

 

 

The Xu, the Fruitful Emptiness between Lovers’ Brushstrokes

 

Autumn birds gather into flocks,
and flocks into waves and scarves,
disclosing little, hiding much—

whoever is mortal
commonly strives
for the measure,
straining against it—

but gods—gods alone,
if true—may be at ease,
themselves bearing the measure,
though they did not set it;

and yet both mortals and gods
cannot but admire, deep down,
musicians and poets—those who hone,
their whole lives through, measure’s clear tone,

never turning away from sounding it,
ever seeking to bring it forth—
like the soul’s own pulse,
with the husk removed:

for flower and fruit.