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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

Lock Him Up!

Fredericksburg wasn’t Gettysburg,
said Robert Frost, in “The Black Cottage,”
nor is it Minneapolis, but where
blood floods from innocents in America
you’ll see hooded gunmen,
their hollow, kevlar-wrapped hearts
wedded to a reborn plantation boss who
extracts retribution by Executive Order.

Here we stand idle to see the Statue of Liberty
reduced to a candle of license
that allows a phony king to get away
with murder and kidnapping on the high seas,
on foreign soil, and American neighborhoods –
our streets overrun with craven, cowardly thugs
who’d rip him to shreds if they knew the truth:
their job is to just keep him out of prison.

There’s not a civil cell within the corpulent felon-in-chief;
will our failure to serve him his just deserts trigger civil war?

Damned if we do…
We damn our children if we don’t lock him up.

Dave Read

The Black Cottage

We chanced in passing by that afternoon
To catch it in a sort of special picture
Among tar-banded ancient cherry trees,
Set well back from the road in rank lodged grass,
The little cottage we were speaking of,
A front with just a door between two windows,
Fresh painted by the shower a velvet black.
We paused, the minister and I, to look.
He made as if to hold it at arm’s length
Or put the leaves aside that framed it in.
‘Pretty,’ he said. ‘Come in. No one will care.’
The path was a vague parting in the grass
That led us to a weathered window-sill.
We pressed our faces to the pane. ‘You see,’ he said,
‘Everything’s as she left it when she died.
Her sons won’t sell the house or the things in it.
They say they mean to come and summer here
Where they were boys. They haven’t come this year.
They live so far away-one is out west-
It will be hard for them to keep their word.
Anyway they won’t have the place disturbed.’
A buttoned hair-cloth lounge spread scrolling arms
Under a crayon portrait on the wall
Done sadly from an old daguerreotype.
‘That was the father as he went to war.
She always, when she talked about war,
Sooner or later came and leaned, half knelt
Against the lounge beside it, though I doubt
If such unlifelike lines kept power to stir
Anything in her after all the years.
He fell at Gettysburg or Fredericksburg,
I ought to know-it makes a difference which:
Fredericksburg wasn’t Gettysburg, of course.
But what I’m getting to is how forsaken
A little cottage this has always seemed;
Since she went more than ever, but before-
I don’t mean altogether by the lives
That had gone out of it, the father first,
Then the two sons, till she was left alone.
(Nothing could draw her after those two sons.
She valued the considerate neglect
She had at some cost taught them after years.)
I mean by the world’s having passed it by-
As we almost got by this afternoon.
It always seems to me a sort of mark
To measure how far fifty years have brought us.
Why not sit down if you are in no haste?
These doorsteps seldom have a visitor.
The warping boards pull out their own old nails
With none to tread and put them in their place.
She had her own idea of things, the old lady.
And she liked talk. She had seen Garrison
And Whittier, and had her story of them.
One wasn’t long in learning that she thought
Whatever else the Civil War was for
It wasn’t just to keep the States together,
Nor just to free the slaves, though it did both.
She wouldn’t have believed those ends enough
To have given outright for them all she gave.
Her giving somehow touched the principle
That all men are created free and equal.
And to hear her quaint phrases-so removed
From the world’s view to-day of all those things.
That’s a hard mystery of Jefferson’s.
What did he mean? Of course the easy way
Is to decide it simply isn’t true.
It may not be. I heard a fellow say so.
But never mind, the Welshman got it planted
Where it will trouble us a thousand years.
Each age will have to reconsider it.
You couldn’t tell her what the West was saying,
And what the South to her serene belief.
She had some art of hearing and yet not
Hearing the latter wisdom of the world.
White was the only race she ever knew.
Black she had scarcely seen, and yellow never.
But how could they be made so very unlike
By the same hand working in the same stuff?
She had supposed the war decided that.
What are you going to do with such a person?
Strange how such innocence gets its own way.
I shouldn’t be surprised if in this world
It were the force that would at last prevail.
Do you know but for her there was a time
When to please younger members of the church,
Or rather say non-members in the church,
Whom we all have to think of nowadays,
I would have changed the Creed a very little?
Not that she ever had to ask me not to;
It never got so far as that; but the bare thought
Of her old tremulous bonnet in the pew,
And of her half asleep was too much for me.
Why, I might wake her up and startle her.
It was the words ‘descended into Hades’
That seemed too pagan to our liberal youth.
You know they suffered from a general onslaught.
And well, if they weren’t true why keep right on
Saying them like the heathen? We could drop them.
Only-there was the bonnet in the pew.
Such a phrase couldn’t have meant much to her.
But suppose she had missed it from the Creed
As a child misses the unsaid Good-night,
And falls asleep with heartache-how should I feel?
I’m just as glad she made me keep hands off,
For, dear me, why abandon a belief
Merely because it ceases to be true.
Cling to it long enough, and not a doubt
It will turn true again, for so it goes.
Most of the change we think we see in life
Is due to truths being in and out of favour.
As I sit here, and oftentimes, I wish
I could be monarch of a desert land
I could devote and dedicate forever
To the truths we keep coming back and back to.
So desert it would have to be, so walled
By mountain ranges half in summer snow,
No one would covet it or think it worth
The pains of conquering to force change on.
Scattered oases where men dwelt, but mostly
Sand dunes held loosely in tamarisk
Blown over and over themselves in idleness.
Sand grains should sugar in the natal dew
The babe born to the desert, the sand storm
Retard mid-waste my cowering caravans-
‘There are bees in this wall.’ He struck the clapboards,
Fierce heads looked out; small bodies pivoted.
We rose to go. Sunset blazed on the windows.

Robert Frost

Published in North of Boston, 1914, by David Nutt, London

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