Thursday, January 16, 2025

Red Letter Poem #238

 

 The Red Letters

 

 

In ancient Rome, feast days were indicated on the calendar by red letters.

To my mind, all poetry and art serves as a reminder that every day we wake together beneath the sun is a red-letter day.

 

––Steven Ratiner

 

 

 


 

 

Red Letter Poem #238

 

 

 

 



Two Poems from Martha Collins



Right up front, this must be said: we hope we’re wrong. We pray our fears are unfounded and, as the curtain is about to rise on this second Trump presidency, it contains none of the reckless developments which made the first so disastrous for so many individuals. Perhaps all the promises of retribution against their enemies will prove to be only campaign bluster––and the plans for reshaping two-and-a-half centuries of democratic precedence will never come to pass. But one thing is certain: if we pretend that this is the new normal; if we turn a blind eye to political powerplays and egregious behavior, thinking this is merely an effort to shake things up, then we may experience an unthinkable transformation for these once-United States––a circumstance we never imagined our children, our grandchildren would ever face.



Martha Collins is something of a unique literary talent. Poet, translator, educator, historian without portfolio, she’s been lauded for her book-length examinations of social and political forces and the ways they are manifest in the lives of ordinary Americans (though the poet uncovers extraordinary circumstance at every turn). In 2022, she published her eleventh volume of poetry, Casualty Reports (Pitt Poetry Series). The following year, her fifth volume of translations from the Vietnamese was released; Dreaming the Mountain (in collaboration with Nguyen Ba Chung) carries over into English work from across a forty-year period by the Buddhist poet and scholar Tuệ Sỹ. Among Martha’s trove of honors are fellowships from the NEA, the Bunting Institute, the Ingram Merrill Foundation, and the Witter Bynner Foundation––as well as three Pushcart Prizes, the Alice Fay Di Castagnola Award, the Laurence Goldstein Poetry Prize, and the William Carlos Williams Award from the Poetry Society of America. Let me start today with what must surely be one of her briefest of poems (something of a carry-over from last week’s Red Letter installment gathering poetic one-liners:)





Erratum, November 2024



We said it would be close. It wasn’t even





This miniature offers us a glimpse into the DNA of Martha’s poetry: in the smallest of gestures, or the most unassuming of grammatical shifts, the synaptic sparks of a thinking mind are revealed. It likely took a minute or so before you entertained the double-meaning of the word even (truncated, and without punctuation), and the ache of our society’s disequilibrium is conjured once again. But doesn’t the title also elicit a certain fear and trembling? How can something so consequential be reduced to one of those little paper slips (like a ballot?) we sometimes find tucked into a just-published volume?



Sensitized to her technique, there are so many small but potent inflection points in this new poem, “Cast,” which arrived in my inbox. Its composition began eight years back, at the dawn of the first Trump presidency; but she set it aside, perhaps feeling it did not accomplish enough. But when she returned to it in 2024, and updated the dramatis personae, something new and unexpected took place.





Cast





for State the head of Exxon a billionaire

for Labor a critic and violator of labor



for Environmental a climate change denier

for Education a critic of public schools



for Housing someone who simply lived in a house

for Homeland Security someone to build a wall



for Senior Councilor race white don’t ask

for Attorney General immigration watch out



Intermission



for Attorney General accused pedophile oops

for Defense defender of war crimes sex offender



for Homeland Security someone who shot her dog

for Education a wrestling empire exec



for France a family associate convicted felon

for Israel no such thing as Palestinians



for Health a conspiracy anti-vaxxer no training

for whatever he wants the richest man in the world



(2016, 2024)





Once again, the lines feel just a little breathless, lacking all punctuation. The title makes us imagine we’re perusing the inside of a Playbill, as the overture swells and we await the first act. And for each of the President’s appointees, the poet insists on bearing witness, on reminding readers who “only the best people” really turned out to be. The bitter ironies are evident throughout, but I loved a line like “for Senior Councilor race white don’t ask”––there’s a whole op-ed diatribe condensed into those closing four words.



But then comes what is, for me, the most devastating element in the poem, a one-line stanza: “Intermission.” And suddenly the relative calm we’ve felt for four years vanishes––poof!––in a cloud of stage-mist. There were certainly failings during the last administration (we should never turn our national life into a fairy tale, no matter who occupies the White House––self-delusion is the opioid that allows awful things to take place on the national stage.) But life felt (for lack of a better word) normal. What is being promised by the incoming administration is anything but. And as the second act begins, Martha introduces the whole new cast of characters, and my heart turns leaden. Perhaps that is all a poet can do at the moment: demand that we sit up straighter in our seats, pay attention, bear witness to what is taking place. Remember, because of the recent election, we all have earned a certain degree of authorship for the scenes being enacted all around us. Are the actors, emboldened, going off-script? There will be some who applaud. And others whose lives will suddenly be torn open, dashed against these political shoals. We cannot simply choose to exit the theater––that is not an option. The strength of our commitment to this democratic experiment will be tested. The final act is being written as we speak.

 

 

Red Letters 3.0

 

* If you would like to receive these poems every Friday in your own in-box – or would like to write in with comments or submissions – send correspondence to:

steven.arlingtonlaureate@gmail.com

 

 

To learn more about the origins of the Red Letter Project, check out an essay I wrote for Arrowsmith Magazine:

https://www.arrowsmithpress.com/community-of-voices

 

and the Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene

http://dougholder.blogspot.com

 

For updates and announcements about Red Letter projects and poetry readings, please follow me on BlueSky

@stevenratiner.bsky.social

and on Twitter          

@StevenRatiner

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

A Handpicked Poem by Michael Todd Steffen


 A Handpicked Poem

by Michael Todd Steffen


Winter 2024

A l e x a n d e r H o l l e n b e r g

origin story, crow

First in the 2-Day Poem Contest 2023, Contemporary Verse 2, published online in December 2023

– on the occasion of Earth Day 2023


The crow’s wing is a blade

slicing the ocean open:

inside, the usual offal—birds’ nests

of old transatlantic cable, fists of seagrass

that clasp and conceal the bleached bones

of tankers and trawl nets, dusky shards of fallen stars

set down on the seabed in a sunken syzygy

of celestial trash—a drowned, stationary orbit.

Even deeper in abyssalpelagic space, a forest

of grey spruce slow-dances

in the dark undercurrent, like phosphenes

forged by the pressure of water and salt.

The crow plucks one, squirrels it in her plumage

and soars—for a moment spruce and crow and sea and sky

concatenate, which is to say create,

a new cosmos in the ink of her wing,

connecting the drowned

to what cannot be drowned.

She returns the spruce to drier ground, from its boughs

watches fishermen gadding about the bright, boatless harbor,

gathering bait and gossip, mending generations

of decay in their nets,

listens to them quiz one another about traps and tides,

the topography of a good trawl line, the boundaries

of inherited territories and the brisk profits

to which they’ll one day return—

as if returning

is something that will always happen,

as if there were a net wide enough

to reel back in the world.



As I comb back through a file named poems_by_others, I find the great blessing of Alexander Hollenberg’s poem, “origin story, crow,” found a year ago in the cited online poetry journal I go back to. To me it’s a “winter” poem because I found it online last winter, and because the fishermen in the poem are doing the winter work of mending nets and readying gear. The texture of the language is rich as the paperweight weather and its palpable ghost-pluming air we’re in today.



It’s January 11th, 2025. In the Boston area it’s snowing, a brief assurance we’ll get at least a taste of the winter season this year. 10 years ago, in 2015, we had a doozy of a winter that had me looking for a plane ticket back to Oklahoma to spend a month just to get out of the blasts and shoveling. As I remember it, one full-blown 13-inch blizzard a week. We accumulated a record 110.6 inches that year.



And, on most of the media I try like a dog chasing a Ferrari to keep up with, we’re in the aftermath of the LA wildfires which began on Tuesday evening, three nights ago. The scope of the devastation is piercing. Right here in my own country a glimpse of the sort of bleakest devastation I’ve been watching unfold in Gaza, Ukraine, Haiti, Sudan over recent years. There is no war in America… Except perhaps the back lines of the war or struggle humanity is engaged in now globally: climate change. Which in a sense is an ongoing war we have been in against global reality or truth. A week or so ago Meta (formerly Facebook) dismissed its fact-checkers. Somebody leaped at the LA tragedy in a lampooning gesture to that dismissal, posting Greenland had carpet bombed LA in response to assumptive President Trump’s bid to annex their land, and for our involvement in the destruction in Gaza. Try fact-checking ironies. The post was seen before it disappeared. Perhaps in an age of widespread farce, effect-checking would be the name of the game.



This morning’s snow isn’t all a job. As I woke to see it blanketing the housetops outside my window, something child-like sprang and effervesced in me. April, month of awaking desire and its dormant virulence surrounded by a new generation of competition, might be the cruelest month. But December, January and February can contain superlative senses of claustrophobia, darkness, and doom (end of year, end of the world…). A snowfall, brief as most are anymore, is a divine distraction from all that closed-in northern angst.



Climate change and warmer weather has opened the northern winter to more clement temperatures, yet deepened the sense of our doom in the long view. The less snow we see up here, the more convinced we become of the phenomenon that the world is warming. This is different from being convinced by reports and photographs. It is, I imagine, the difference between a doctor’s words and the pain and weakness the gravely ill are overcome by. Warm or even not so cold winter days in Boston refute any hope that documents have just been photo-shopped and edited along with all the scientific research. January sunshine sinks a much starker dread in me, because my mind is convinced of its global and potentially millennial implications.



Hollenberg’s poem is an “origin story”—the title not capitalized, as in the beginning of the beginning, in the throes/remnant of timeless chaos, still lacking conventions, like rules for capitalized letters in titles. The first act of the poem, the crow’s flight or rowing, is “slicing” as though the ocean here were a pie? This opening, true to the title, remembers the divisions of the acts of creation in Genesis, land from water, day from night.



Winter’s the season of ends and so origins and origin stories. Its beginning is marked by the shortest day in the calendar year, scientifically the darkest time of the year, night with its analogues of chaos, blindness and lostness. Along these lines the birth of Christ signifies the beginning of a new order. We make resolutions for New Year’s Day to become new, better people.



But Hollenberg’s poem is going to get a little more forensic—“inside, the usual offal”—with that homophone of “awful,” the dread feeling darkness, death, which the absence of order deepens inside us.



For the new order to step in, the old must be largely digested and dissolved. Hollenberg’s primordial waters, bearing witness to the historical day, have a bad case of indigestion from “old transatlantic cable…the bleached bones/of tankers and trawl nets”—modulating the musical registers of the poem’s language between myth and documentary, juxtaposing the two essential times, eternity and now, aligning with the poet’s “sunken syzygy/of celestial trash.”



Science is now admitting to materials we call forever plastics.



In another staggering signature the poet more deeply names his “deeper” ocean, for our utter disorientation of up and down, “abyssalpelagic space” where a “forest/of grey spruce slow-dances” from its valley or hillside time out of mind before an a-historical flood swept over it. Forests of spruce don’t grow under salt water. But oceans have been known to move, over whole areas, forests.



Crows are bantering spirits. Known to collect odd things, bottlecaps, earrings… They are notorious takers. They sing in omens of noise. Their high status in indigenous mythology stands well documented and we have phones, we have, more importantly, libraries. Nearly everybody at one time or other, most of us more than once, is gathered into an audible address by these odd angels of roadsides, neighborhoods, fields and, yes, the seaside. In Jung’s sense, the crow’s an archetype of the supernatural, a luminous token of creation in the world out there before but also always just as we see it, as though we have always known it, a touchstone for the nature of reality beyond, though also part of, our will and might to bend. Like the doubtful hope expressed in the brilliant final lines of the poem:



as if returning

is something that will always happen,



as if there were a net wide enough

to reel back in the world.



Again the homophonic play between “reel” and “real”; that “net” both referring to the tradecraft net of the fishermen and also to the (Inter)net we most all are most always caught up in.



“origin story, crow” is what Allen Grossman might call a cosmogenic poem. In it Hollenberg magisterially lights up the dual nature of our tenuous residency on earth, in its subjective/objective framework of interdependency, dear and endearment. It’s hard to imagine another language with its demands to adhere, advocate for and sell, holding and giving so much so succinctly, to nearly anybody, other than the language of poetry.

Saturday, January 11, 2025

Poet Sara Letourneau: A Poet who explores the maw of creation





Interview with Doug Holder ( Board member of the New England Poetry Club)


I decided it was a good time to interview poet Sara Letourneau, as this accomplished poet and New England Club Poetry member has her debut poetry collection out-- titled " Wild Gardens." And it seems that "Wild Gardens" is an apt label for her book---because there is nothing 'tame' about her work. It is a collection that drills deep, and goes beyond what you see--to what it means--a full-faced exploration.




"Wild Gardens" is your debut poetry collection. When did you feel confident enough to pen a first book? Were you encouraged by people in your community? Did you set a certain standard for yourself?


It wasn't so much about being confident enough to write a debut poetry collection. Rather, for a long time, I was focused on writing individual poems, revising them, and submitting them for publication. By the time I'd written enough poems and had enough published for a full-length collection, the milestone had sort of snuck up on me. My boyfriend, Jim, who keeps track of all my poems in an Excel spreadsheet, had a better "bird's eye view" of my work being ready than I did!


After that, I knew getting a book published was the next step. That ended up being a longer process than I anticipated. In fact, almost 2 years passed from the time I started submitting the first version of Wild Gardens to the time I finally sent it to Kelsay Books, who ended up publishing the book.


Because it was such a long process, I definitely needed help staying encouraged and positive, and my community was a big help with that. At the beginning, that community was small: my boyfriend; the other poets in my Poetic Inklings group, Carmen Barefield and Amanda Davis; a couple of close friends who frequently read or gave feedback on my work; and writer friends online who I'd met in various places.


Once I launched the Pour Me a Poem open mic with Wayne-Daniel Berard, that community grew exponentially. So by the time Wild Gardens was accepted for publication (and then published), so many more people were cheering for me, and that was amazing.




Your poems are set on the shores of Cape Cod, the lava fields of Iceland, etc... How did you pick your terrain to be the subject of your poetry? What spoke to you?


I'm a believer that "the poem chooses the poet." Ideas for new poems come to me; I don't go hunting for them. So I can't say I consciously picked the terrain that's often the subject of poems in Wild Gardens. But I do know why I ended up writing about those places.


I grew up loving Cape Cod. My parents vacationed there before I was born, and I ended up celebrating my first five birthdays in Chatham. And since my family continued vacationing there well into my teenage years, I found my own reasons for wanting to come back to the Cape. I love the ocean and beaches, the parks and different ways of interacting with wildlife there, the charming downtown areas of Chatham and other towns, the myriad hydrangeas in full bloom during the summer, and the calmer, more peaceful vibe it has compared to mainland Massachusetts.


My parents and my brother now live on the Cape, so that gives me even more incentive to visit it now. In short, it holds so many beautiful memories for me, and I keep being amazed by its quiet yet ever-present natural beauty.


Iceland, on the other hand, was the first country I visited outside the US. (And for a writing retreat, no less!) Talk about being amazed by natural beauty! Reykjavik is an incredible city, and while I highly recommend spending a few days there if you go yourself, the countryside is what floors me every time. The mountains, the waterfalls, the geothermals - these and other places contribute to an environment that's wilder, more breathtaking, and unlike anything else I've seen in the world. Iceland captured my imagination and heart in ways that can now be best described by some of the poems in Wild Gardens.




In your poem "Origin Story of Cape Cod," you go well beyond the tourist view, and slip into the marrow of its creation. Cape Cod takes on a sense of profundity—that we may not realize as we are spreading tanning lotion on ourselves-- while sitting on its ancient beaches. Your take?


Yes, Cape Cod is more than just a summer tourist spot. It has a history that's richer than we may be aware of, and not just on a social or "human civilization" level. I was visiting the Cape Cod Museum of Natural History in Brewster, and during the exhibit on the Cape's geologic history, this very idea struck me.


A place is more than just the benches where we sit, the trees and animals that inhabit it, the structures we've built there, and the stories we've created on its soil. I think we often forget that the planet Earth is billions of years old. Its landscape, climate, and wildlife have disappeared, been reborn, and evolved so much over time. Hundreds of thousands of years ago, the places where we now live, work, and play didn't look the way they do now. This left me imagining what Cape Cod would have been thinking, feeling, and observing if it was a character, and if it had the voice to describe what its "birthing" or creation process was like.




F.S. Fitzgerald wrote, "In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o'clock in the morning, day after day." You chose 2:00 a.m. as your dark night--in the poem "2:00 AM." Do you think during these hours we are stripped naked, and for a little while the artifice that protects us from the concept of 'nothingness' is gone-- and we see things in a sharp, cutting, clarity?


The thing about "2:00 a.m." is that it's about the speaker's experience with insomnia induced by anxiety and overthinking. I've experienced this level of anxiety many times in the past, though not for a couple of years at this point. So this poem isn't exactly philosophizing about the dark night of the soul. Rather, it shows an almost literal "dark night of the soul": the experience of someone living with such intense fear and anxiety that they can't sleep, perhaps for nights on end.


When you experience such an acute form of anxiety that it leads to insomnia, yes, it can feel like you are stripped naked, in front of no one except yourself. But it's almost impossible to see things clearly, because the thoughts that wrapped you into that vortex can sometimes be irrational and unjustified.


That being said, the experience shared in the poem is based on my own. Someone else's experience with anxiety-induced insomnia could be very different. But I hope that the common ground those readers can find with this poem is how terrifying and out-of-control those sleepless nights can be.


As for why I chose "2:00 a.m." as the title, I recall often turning over to look at the clock on those nights and finding it was roughly around that time.



You are a writing coach. How objective can you be about your own work?


It's so hard to be objective about your work, even when you work in this field and help other writers! Sometimes I discover how a poem needs to grow and be revised on my own. But most of the time, I share poems with my Poetic Inklings and (more recently) Orion Continued poetry groups, along with one other critique partner, and the perspectives and suggestions they offer are often things I might never have found on my own.



Why should we read your book?


Wild Gardens offers one reminder after another of how crucial and meaningful it is for us to pay attention to what's around us and be grateful for the surprises, the everyday, the wonders of our world, miracles big and small. If readers need or want more reminders of these things, then they're bound to appreciate reading this book.







An Origin Story of Cape Cod

Let’s start at the beginning,

twenty-three thousand years ago.

Your parents were the earth and Laurentide,

an ice sheet stretching from the Arctic Ocean

all the way to what would later be known

as the islands of Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard.

If anyone had borne witness, they would have found

a cold crust of white as far as the eye could see.

This didn’t happen all at once, of course.

Patience is both virtue and necessary evil

when you need about five centuries to emerge.

But not once did you complain as, leisurely,

your more glacial parent retreated north.

In three lobes, it scraped over bedrock,

carving and molding you into moraines, kames,

and outwash plains as if with a sculptor’s tools

but no final design in mind.

In its wake, it strewed all manner

of rock debris over you—miles upon miles

of till, gravel, sand, and boulders hundreds of feet thick.

But you didn’t mind. You liked the way

the meltwater streams dressed you, how their deposits

filled your deltas and expanded west,

how leftover lumps of ice melted

and made jewellike kettle holes along your peninsula.

You even chose to bear your relict valleys,

your riverless battle scars, with pride.

You couldn’t fathom then

that, one day, you’d be robed in

pitch pines, marshes, and cranberry bogs

or called home by piping plovers, seals, and humans.

You didn’t even care about your name until

the Wampanoag and the Nauset called you Turtle Island

and the British colonists Cape Cod.

No. That long ago, your only care

was that you were born,

and to be born means to exist,

and to exist means boundless possibilities.

S.L.

Friday, January 10, 2025

Red Letter Poem #237

 The Red Letters

 

 

In ancient Rome, feast days were indicated on the calendar by red letters.

To my mind, all poetry and art serves as a reminder that every day we wake together beneath the sun is a red-letter day.

 

––Steven Ratiner

 

 

 

  

 

 

Red Letter Poem #237

 

 

 





One-Liners


Henny Youngman, a nightclub and TV star from the golden age of comedy, was known as the ‘King of the One-Liners.’ Paring the set-ups for his gags down to the bare minimum, he could often provoke audiences into a wry smirk or a hearty guffaw with a single sentence. Here’s his most famous joke––a line that is so well-known, it’s spawned a thousand comic spinoffs: "Take my wife––please!" It’s all in the timing: he leads us in one direction before pulling the rug out from under our expectations. Poetry, too, has a long tradition of one-liners, the shortest of short-form verses. Its ancestry leads us back to the Japanese haiku which, traditionally, was a one-line poem, a quiet waterfall of calligraphic characters descending the rice paper scroll. If necessary, some characters might spill onto a second column––but the reader would not view this as a separate line. So why are we, in the West, so accustomed to translating these pithy poems into three separate pieces? Kireji, or ‘cut-words’, are syllables at the close of a phrase that add emphasis, shift context or focus, catch one’s breath. We have no equivalent in English and so the use of line-breaks to form three sections probably felt most appropriate. Some classic haiku in English would still work well in their original one-line format. Take this little gem from Issa:

Distant mountains reflected in the eye of the dragonfly



Little is lost without our tripart structure––and the sense of a vastness embodied in so diminutive a lens still conjures quite a dramatic image. Influenced by these masters of brevity, there are many Western writers who have achieved similar intensities––writing less and relying more on the reader’s imagination to fulfill the moment. Here are a few of my favorites. Some American poets fudge the form a bit by including a title (a rarity in traditional Japanese haiku.) Here’s a playful piece from Philip Whalen:



Early Spring


The dog writes on the window with his nose.



What a wealth of information in so small a package––and I think every dog owner will affirm the truth of those smeared, urgent messages: Squirrels! Pigeons! I want out!



Yvor Winters conjures quite the metaphysical mood with his poem:



The Shadow’s Song:


I am beside you, now.


And who would have imagined so much grief contained in a mere six words?



Elegy


Who would I show it to



—W.S. Merwin



Humbly, I’ll contribute one of my own to this gathering, a long stream of words too long for the margins of this page, so you’ll have to imagine it running on into space beneath its unusual title:



@



Cloud@sky, eye@early moon, clutch of crows@neighbor’s pine, you beside me,

home@last.



––S.R.



But let me share three from another Arlington poet, someone for whom the haiku has become, not only a discipline, but a way of life. Brad Bennett both teaches the artform and spends his days perfecting his own prolific outpouring. He is the author of three collections of haiku:

a drop of pond; a turn in the river; and a box of feathers––all from Red Moon Press. By using minimal punctuation, we experience the words recombining before our very eyes, finding new ways to excite and interconnect neural bundles across the brain.



spring clouds I have yet to write



How shall we interpret these clouds? Are they the ones the poet is yet to invent––or are they like his teacher, gently chiding the poet for his estrangement from the notebook? And, briefer still, another:



pond still no punctuation



Wasn’t it a quiet delight to make and remake the potential meanings in this/these simple statement(s)? And a last one, the very shortest of the bunch––a three-word masterstroke:



birdsong every now



Sometimes, reading this, I’d find myself adding words, to fill out the phrase. Other times, I’m hearing spiritual master Meher Baba’s injunction to be here now (in this instance, guided by an avian guru.) By demanding that more be accomplished with less, a poet discovers how mercuric and surprising language can be, how far-reaching its sparks. I’ll circle back to Henny Youngman and offer another of his one-line delights: “When I read about the evils of drinking, I gave up reading.” Just as our minds prepare to zig, the comedian jolts us with a zag––and the tickled neurons provoke laughter. Not so very different from what the greatest haiku-master Basho does in this one:



A cicada shell––it sang itself utterly away.



Best keep the mind awake and nimble: these fleeting lightning-strike poems demand that we elevate our game so we, too, might find the startling beauty in even a seemingly-simple utterance.

 

 

 

 

Red Letters 3.0

 

* If you would like to receive these poems every Friday in your own in-box – or would like to write in with comments or submissions – send correspondence to:

steven.arlingtonlaureate@gmail.com

 

 

To learn more about the origins of the Red Letter Project, check out an essay I wrote for Arrowsmith Magazine:

https://www.arrowsmithpress.com/community-of-voices

 

and the Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene

http://dougholder.blogspot.com

 

For updates and announcements about Red Letter projects and poetry readings, please follow me on BlueSky

@stevenratiner.bsky.social

and on Twitter          

@StevenRatiner