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Reads Poems

Reads Poems

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Poems

Order should be imposed on my poems, but isn't likely to be until I turn to carpentry, or painting, to carry me through the day. The display here is latest first.

Laureates Inglorious
My Name as Commandment
Mourn America, Grieve America
All But the Few
Lock Him Up!
Poetry versus Creative Writing
Epigram
Season to be Witched
Not Unlike the Hoi Polloi
Tart Sweet, Mes Amis
Delirious
Boycott and Embargo
Patriotic Pronouns
Holy Calendarism
Words couldn’t care less
Monument Mountain, by William Cullen Bryant
The Embargo, by William Cullen Bryant
Face Plants
Meditation on the Counter-revolutionary Nature of Laureateships
Introibo Ad Altare Dei
From the Book of Young Dave, the Elder
Caution! Babies on board
Word Play
Take Care
Only Poets Can Serve Two Masters
Hollow and unholy is “it”
Make Calfs Golden Again?
Reading Matters
What Poetry Does
Expel Poetry to Restore the Republic
The First One’s Free
Poetry Isn’t Blue, It’s Read
Use of Verse
After Dallas, There’s More
Partisan Scourge and Poetry Prize
Most Foul Murder
Big Sister Watches Ewes
Mutual of Idaho’s Ivory Tower Power Hour
Big Beautiful Bombs
Birdsong at Dawn
Anti-social Media
No Virginia, there is no Santa Clause
Google’s Trumpian Gulp
Social media makes bank, not community
Dogs, Cats, Birds, and Breeze
A Rose Versus Prof’s Nosegay
Let MAGA Quake, the West’s Awake
Death Hasn’t All Dominion
Hoist on their own petard
Poetry is Dead, Long Live Poems
Semiquincentennial dirge/hymn
Organics matter
Spring, alas
Whiff of Lilac
Savage Matter
Vernal Homily
One Decade At A Time
Easter 2025
Ars poetica, again
New Church
Rook’s Remorse
The Equity of Poetry
Eyewitness Blues, April 5, 1968
A Biblical portion
Ode to books
Fringe of lunacy
Live Rock
Pulpit Humor
Easy Did It
Caveat Emptor
Dopler vision
Woke
By Their Agreeable Quarrel
Opus Dei
The Second Falling, Jan. 20, 2025
February 24, 2022
Or, are we smarty pants after all
You’ll Find Poems in the Dairy Aisle
1964
Hey Kids
Say Cheese
Be Quiet
Manhattan Bridge, Edward Hopper, 1928
Berkshires fall foliage, Parson’s Marsh, Lenox
Prayer for the Fallen
Speaking of Which
New England October
Why JFK Had to Go
Wither Grass Roots
Red Dead + Blue Dead = Dead Dead
When Lilacs Next in Cell’d Palms Wither
Wiseguys are the New Wranglers
Pivot of Fall
X marks the spot
Al fresco
Botanical America, or Project 2026
Semiquincentennial Dirge
Lament for the Visually Impaired
Don’t Be So Retarded
All that glitter
They’re OK, I’m OK
If Pronouns Could talk
Charge of the Light Blue *Brigade
Poetry is not speech
Apprentice and Aspirant Poets
April is cruel to Kings, not lovers
Alma Mater, or The Football Poem
War Orphans
Readers and Writers
Which dash-American are You?
Mothers and fathers of fodder
Yes, unless
The Know Testament
Fat heads crave A.I.
Good Morning Body, Mind, & Soul
Organic prompts
A.I. is a big fat lie
What’s new is not
Dumb as a Smartphone
The Left isn’t Right, Emerson Is
Poetry is magic
They Push-We Pull
Everyday is Earth Day
Haberdashery
Must poems be reasonable?
Art Matters, Entertainment Counts
The Gravest Show on Earth
Lucky ducks
If it were only truth
Lord Tennyson Prays for Peace
Emerson’s Art
Death Rattle
Eyesight Insight
The Sympathetic Point of Roses
Why reason?
Until the Muse
How to Tell a Good Poem
Overheard at VerseFest
Owl Song
Haberdashery
Who Are You
The American Binary
Song of My Community
Or, current resident
How Risible the Visible
The Poet as Critic
On feet of clay
Break the News Cycle
Rhymes with Rushmore
To the Esteemed Poets
February Souvenir
Fraught
Late October colors Lenox in the Berkshires
October in a Poem
P’s on Earth
Monetizing private Ryan, or WW Too
Principal Retardation
Word to the Wise
Terrible Twos
Not These Hollow Pols
Occidental Haiku
Profess This!
Real Weather
Primary Binary
If it’s Bad for Metaphor, it’s Bad for Politics
Alphabet Soup for the Soul
Giddy Up
Wintertime Blues
The Next Homer
Our M.O.
white chickens
Free Poets Free Poetry
Read On, Write In, Drop Out
Dressing Tennyson
Look Up
Resolution
Without Poetry
We are Champions
this just in
Syllogism for Non-philosophy Majors
Modern American Poetry
Who Am I
Amanda, Dame Commander of the Lite Brigade
Whimsy whispers
T.S. Eliot skips Pigalle
Boomers at war
Home Schoolin’
Silent Reel
Rain Delay
Backyard Agriculture
Add title
Childhood escaped, with breadcrumbs
Oswego Suite
Yoknapatawpha
Vice verse
The Poetry of Henry Adams
The British Dream
Ho Hum, More Gone
Have you seen Johanna?
Commonsense Manifesto
It Is Simple
Portrait of the Artist as a Merry Prankster, or, Who’s Felicity?
Let Them Linger
Siren or Sage?
The Plane Truth
Pivot of Spring
Mourning Meditation
Big Apple Byte
Old Poets Lament
The Times it is a changling
Mash note to Selfiers
Bi-PartisanWhich
Peeskawso Peak
Souls of gray folk
After Boomer Era
In the beginning
Founding Shyster
Knew Baltimore Catechism
Battle them for the Republic
Let’s start over
Tyranny v. Liberty
Nature’s trombone
Schools of Poetry
The Saddest Thing
Rapping with J.V. Cunningham
Saturday rosary
Haiku is no sneeze
Lament for the Poets of Little England
Did Fiona Fail Hill Republicans?
Love Rocks
U.S.A. 1776-1964
Notes on the New Racism
Peeskawso Peak, Monument Mountain, July, 2021
Poll, Pander, Plead – Repeat
Yankees Noodle
Group God
Play Skool
Be Not Apart
ill shooters
Natural world monetized
Capital poetry
the deconstruction of critical race theory.
Memorial Day
Fakir’s Dozen Ways of Looking at Stuff
Say what, Leonardo?
Spring, and All that de(con)struction
Machine Learning
I Love Lois Lane
Slice of Life
The Outer Borough Colonel, Old Bone Spur
Bleak February
Body and Soul C.I.S.
If Christ is English
Poets Torch
13579@c
Who Initiates Sex?
the poet self-shrinks
Joke
R. SC
Damn you, Hasbro
Credulity Gap
The Apology of St. Andrew
crazy uncle, eh?
The Madness of Saint Amy of the Robes
Fancy Foodie Quiz
Diary of a Bipartisan Poet
Rude or Ignobel?
At the Crossroads
Kill U. or it kills U.S.
Blowin in the wings
in re: BD
burns
Judging April
Homage, or not
Unrhymed Hinge
Vital Graffiti – July 2, 2021
Deconstruction is cultural grave-robbery.
untitled
Visionaries need not apply
A Poet’s Dose
Not to brag, but
Emily Dickinson’s job?
Re-orient the occidental?
here’s to deb
When Poetry
Hope is a Golden Noose
poetic therapy
The mind’s eyeball
America’s Got Stars
Vice Versa
TV Reality Blinder
How-to Star Search
Mothers’ Work is Never Done
Ice Glen trail, Stockbridge, July 2020
Advice for the Novice, now on the Cape
Cape Cod Camp Haiku
Good Mount Rushmore
Poetry bears
Fair Haven and Fort Ontario, July 2020
The Revolution, Live stream
Not to the Sea
Sonnet-19
Living Will
Fear Sweeps America
Arts Not Popular
Poets Invent
Some Poetry
Her Subject is Poetry
Black is the new Beige
Frosted Gloss
Hunker Down
at the oh boy gym
Out the Window: June 23, 2019*
Afterparty
Poems Are Not
Savory Abstractions
Verbose Haiku
Vernal Metaphysics
Art Hole in the Berkshires
self portrait in birthday suit
Fall Vespers and Winter Reverie
Vowels of bright desire
Third Degree
Live Ekphrasis
Before Winter
We Fined God
Weight of January
What’s bracing about spring
September
We Know Breeze
In the Matter of Form
Vets
STRESS
Facade of Arrogance
The Muse Leaps Generations
Paean to an Eminence
What’s the Word
Words Are Like That
The Flush Plinths of Lenox
Mother’s Day Handwriting Samples
Who Tats Queen Anne’s Lace
Deal?
Eagle Pond Farm Market
Portrait of a Pebble
Rhymes with Chump
Awaken Yeats
Super Bowl haiku
Carillon Call
Twenty and Six
Numb Bird

Monument Mountain, by William Cullen Bryant

Thou who wouldst see the lovely and the wild
Mingled in harmony on Nature’s face,
Ascend our rocky mountains. Let thy foot
Fail not with weariness, for on their tops
The beauty and the majesty of earth,
Spread wide beneath, shall make thee to forget
The steep and toilsome way. There, as thou stand’st,
The haunts of men below thee, and around
The mountain summits, thy expanding heart
Shall feel a kindred with that loftier world
To which thou art translated, and partake
The enlargement of thy vision. Thou shalt look
Upon the green and rolling forest tops,
And down into the secrets of the glens,
And streams, that with their bordering thickets strive
To hide their windings. Thou shalt gaze, at once,
Here on white villages, and tilth, and herds,
And swarming roads, and there on solitudes
That only hear the torrent, and the wind,
And eagle’s shriek. There is a precipice
That seems a fragment of some mighty wall,
Built by the hand that fashioned the old world,
To separate its nations, and thrown down
When the flood drowned them. To the north, a path
Conducts you up the narrow battlement.
Steep is the western side, shaggy and wild
With mossy trees, and pinnacles of flint,
And many a hanging crag. But, to the east,
Sheer to the vale go down the bare old cliffs,
Huge pillars, that in middle heaven upbear
Their weather-beaten capitals, here dark
With the thick moss of centuries, and there
Of chalky whiteness where the thunderbolt
Has splintered them. It is a fearful thing
To stand upon the beetling verge, and see
Where storm and lightning, from that huge gray wall,
Have tumbled down vast blocks, and at the base
Dashed them in fragments, and to lay thine ear
Over the dizzy depth, and hear the sound
Of winds, that struggle with the woods below,
Come up like ocean murmurs. But the scene
Is lovely round; a beautiful river there
Wanders amid the fresh and fertile meads,
The paradise he made unto himself,
Mining the soil for ages. On each side
The fields swell upward to the hills; beyond,
Above the hills, in the blue distance, rise
The mighty columns with which earth props heaven.

is a tale about these reverend rocks,
A sad tradition of unhappy love,
And sorrows borne and ended, long ago,
When over these fair vales the savage sought
His game in the thick woods. There was a maid,
The fairest of the Indian maids, bright-eyed,
With wealth of raven tresses, a light form,
And a gay heart. About her cabin-door
The wide old woods resounded with her song
And fairy laughter all the summer day.
She loved her cousin; such a love was deemed,
By the morality of those stern tribes,
Incestuous, and she struggled hard and long
Against her love, and reasoned with her heart,
As simple Indian maiden might. In vain.
Then her eye lost its lustre, and her step
Its lightness, and the gray-haired men that passed
Her dwelling, wondered that they heard no more
The accustomed song and laugh of her, whose looks
Were like the cheerful smile of Spring, they said,
Upon the Winter of their age. She went
To weep where no eye saw, and was not found
When all the merry girls were met to dance,
And all the hunters of the tribe were out;
Nor when they gathered from the rustling husk
The shining ear; nor when, by the river’s side,
Thay pulled the grape and startled the wild shades
With sounds of mirth. The keen-eyed Indian dames
Would whisper to each other, as they saw
Her wasting form, and say _the girl will die_.

One day into the bosom of a friend,
A playmate of her young and innocent years,
She poured her griefs. “Thou know’st, and thou alone,”
She said, “for I have told thee, all my love,
And guilt, and sorrow. I am sick of life.
All night I weep in darkness, and the morn
Glares on me, as upon a thing accursed,
That has no business on the earth. I hate
The pastimes and the pleasant toils that once
I loved; the cheerful voices of my friends
Have an unnatural horror in mine ear.
In dreams my mother, from the land of souls,
Calls me and chides me. All that look on me
Do seem to know my shame; I cannot bear
Their eyes; I cannot from my heart root out
The love that wrings it so, and I must die.”

It was a summer morning, and they went
To this old precipice. About the cliffs
Lay garlands, ears of maize, and shaggy skins
Of wolf and bear, the offerings of the tribe
Here made to the Great Spirit, for they deemed,
Like worshippers of the elder time, that God
Doth walk on the high places and affect
The earth-o’erlooking mountains. She had on
The ornaments with which her father loved
To deck the beauty of his bright-eyed girl,
And bade her wear when stranger warriors came
To be his guests. Here the friends sat them down,
And sang, all day, old songs of love and death,
And decked the poor wan victim’s hair with flowers,
And prayed that safe and swift might be her way
To the calm world of sunshine, where no grief
Makes the heart heavy and the eyelids red.
Beautiful lay the region of her tribe
Below her, waters resting in the embrace
Of the wide forest, and maize-planted glades
Opening amid the leafy wilderness.
She gazed upon it long, and at the sight
Of her own village peeping through the trees,
And her own dwelling, and the cabin roof
Of him she loved with an unlawful love,
And came to die for, a warm gush of tears
Ran from her eyes. But when the sun grew low
And the hill shadows long, she threw herself
From the steep rock and perished. There was scooped
Upon the mountain’s southern slope, a grave;
And there they laid her, in the very garb
With which the maiden decked herself for death,
With the same withering wild flowers in her hair.
And o’er the mould that covered her, the tribe
Built up a simple monument, a cone
Of small loose stones. Thenceforward all who passed,
Hunter, and dame, and virgin, laid a stone
In silence on the pile. It stands there yet.
And Indians from the distant West, who come
To visit where their fathers’ bones are laid,
Yet tell the sorrowful tale, and to this day
The mountain where the hapless maiden died
Is called the Mountain of the Monument.

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