Authors: Lorine Niedecker
Get a load
of April's
fabulous
frog rattle—
lowland freight cars
in the night
Poet's work
Grandfather
advised me:
Learn a trade
I learned
to sit at desk
and condense
No layoff
from this
condensery
Property is poverty—
I've foreclosed.
I own again
these walls thin
as the back
of my writing tablet.
And more:
all who live here—
card table to eat on,
broken bed—
sacrifice for less
than art.
Now in one year
a book published
and plumbing—
took a lifetime
to weep
a deep
trickle
River-marsh-drowse
and in flood
moonlight
gives sight
of no land.
They fish, a man
takes his wife to town
with his rowboat's 10-horse
ships his voice
to the herons.
Sure they drink
—full foamy folk—
till asleep.
The place is asleep
on one leg in the weeds.
Club 26
Our talk, our books
riled the shore like bullheads
at the roots of the luscious
large water lily
Then we entered the lily
built white on a red carpet
the circular quiet
cool bar
glass stems to caress
We stayed till the stamens trembled
To foreclose
or not
on property
and prose
or care a kite
if the p-p
be yellow, black
or white
To my small
electric pump
To sense
and sound
this world
look to
your snifter
valve
take oil
and hum
T. E. Lawrence
How impossible it is
to be alone
the one thing humanity
has never really
moved towards
As I paint the street
I melt the houses
to point up the turreted cupola
I make hoopla
of the low tavern's neon cross—
very like a cross from here—
I honor the huge blue distant dome
valid somehow to the fellow falling high
Art Center
Glass
and wide seaview
Race that walks
from there
you are lovely
You have
seen
Homemade/Handmade Poems
Consider at the outset:
to be thin for thought
or thick cream blossomy
Many things are better
flavored with bacon
Sweet Life, My love:
didn't you ever try
this delicacy—the marrow
in the bone?