Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Of That Evergreen Played Between the Clouds and Pines

 

Though the mountains lie far
From these Carolina plains,
White clouds, their loosened swirls,
Accost the tall and swaying pines
With such shape and grace,
Pressing downward,
As though in longing.

As if that silent beauty from above
Yearned to be held—
Held and stirred
By that coniferous hairbrush—
That it might release
An outpouring of rain’s crystalline lines

Upon those teasels
Teasing at its cloth and scarf,
Falling at last
Upon such resin-soft,
oil-painted wood.

Shortly after Six O'Clock After the Solstice by the Pool


Heraclitus, “the Dark One,”
Faulted water,
Reproaching it
For the soul’s death.

But who besides water,
When perfectly still,
Seizes and paints
The shades so well?

And yet how little time
We have down here,
In this moving world,

To see and contemplate
What water can reflect
Of a sunrise orange burst.

Where Did They Go, Those Truly Ancient Nations?

 

Those ancient lanes,
Those ancient routes,
Where rushing through
Would be a mortal sin.

Those whom one meets there
Are rare—
One of a kind—

Making one wonder
What has become
Of the timeless awe
Within the modern heart.

There one goes
To clear and cleanse
One’s senses
And one’s mind,

Far enough
From the capital,
Its fevers
And its glut.

And what
Of the Muses,
Whose memory
Has faded?

But there,
Alone
And out beneath the open sky,

Thought lends
Its quiet tune,

And brighter,
Deeper,

A sky rises
Above the cranes,

Just as time ripens
Enough to ask:

“Tell me—
What is truly
Capital in life?”

Monday, June 22, 2026

On "A Pear Blossom in the East Wing" by Qiu Wei

 


An old Chinese poet with sights set

on imperial favors and a job

found a way of putting in

a vision of the emperor’s harem

via the orchard of the pears nearby

and the fruit’s sweat-undarkened skin

 

so that, like pear’s scent of bloom,

his own poetic courting

would soak through the robe

of the Son of Heaven.

 

For how else would any

decent concubine

which wants to lay

with majesties and power

prove that she mastered

 

the proper art and science

and the proper wooing etiquette,

 

rending herself as the best—

as glories’ and greatness’

perfectly trained mirror

or a spotless, prostrated pool?

 

Or like a pear plucked,

a kowtowed figure—

knocking off

and losing

both her legs

and head even?

 

And isn’t there even for transience

of freshly snowing scents

written in the finest of the fonts

a certain kind of poesy

qua science as well as art

by which both the author

and the audience could extract

such favors or as much as they can

even from Hades’ incessant forgetting?

 

Just as there must be both art and science

the name of which too might as well

be a sentence—a sort of sine qua non?