Saturday, December 27, 2025

Red Letter Flashback Friday

 

 

 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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dear Readers,

 

I planned on using the time around the mid-winter holidays to slow down a bit––especially after a rather hectic month or two.  So I hunted for some of my favorite holiday installments, and will offer my little poetry collage this week; and, next Friday, a wonderful poem from Richard Blanco for the turning of the New Year.  Sadly, the hopefulness within today’s installment has dimmed considerably amid more recent headlines.  But the words of the 13th-century French soldier are both haunting and inspiring.  If such simple pleasures are what every human craves, how can we not find some way that allows all of us to enjoy them?

 

Wishing you a happy holiday season,

Steven

 

 

 

 

 

Red Letter Flashback Friday

 

 

 

A Quilted Red Letter for the Mid-winter Holidays

 

 

“Quand je lou tans refroidier/ voi et geleir/ et les arbres despoillier/ et iverneir…”–– writes this anonymous French poet/soldier in “On the Approach of Winter”.  He was returning from the decades-long wars in the south of his country at the start of the 13th century.  “When I see the weather/ turning cold/ and starting to freeze/ and the trees going bare/ and winter coming…”. sings the poet in this surprisingly modern translation.  He is left feeling much the way many of us are these days––“then I want to ease up/ and spend time/ with a good fire beside the brazier,/ and a glass of claret/ in a warm house.”  This is not only because the land is in the grip of the cold but because our hearts are tormented by the ubiquitous and most certainly needless bloodshed that abounds.  I wish I was prepared to offer some wisdom right now concerning the appalling brutality taking place in the Middle East, but likely I am feeling as horrified and helpless as you.  Recently, though, I’ve been remembering how my sister Elaine, a fine quiltmaker, could take remnants of disparate materials and somehow make a grander vision emerge from their conjoining.  I’d like to offer a patchwork of some poems that have been circulating in my mind these days and see what they feel like, taken together.

 

Beside the French verse, I’ll stitch something from my favorite Israeli poet, Yehuda Amichai.  He was a decorated soldier during World War II and the campaign that’s known as the 1948 ‘War for Independence’ (though that title is certainly dependent on which designation is on your identity papers.) Returning, he went back to school and became an educator and an exceptional poet, one of the first writing in colloquial Hebrew.  He became one of that country’s most celebrated authors––but then his radical transformation into a peace activist, whose poems make the case for understanding and reconciliation between the Israeli and Palestinian peoples, made him equally controversial.  Here is a simple piece from him that I love:

 

An Arab Shepherd is Searching for His Goat on Mount Zion

by Yehuda Amichai

 

An Arab shepherd is searching for his goat on Mount Zion and,

on the opposite mountain, I am searching for my little boy.

An Arab shepherd and a Jewish father

both trapped within their momentary failure.

Our voices meet above the Sultan's Pool

in the valley between us.  Neither of us wants

the child or the goat to get chewed up in the gears

of the terrible Had Gadya machine.

 

Afterward we found them among the bushes

and our voices re-entered our bodies, laughing and crying.

 

Searching for a goat or a son––

it’s always been the beginning

of a new religion in these mountains.

 

Protecting those we most dearly love: assuredly, this amounts to the most sacred oath for either parent or shepherd––and few responsibilities will ever feel more consequential.  How can we not cry out to the encompassing powers of the universe at such a moment, pleading for help, and keenly aware of our own limitations?

 

And dovetailing with Amichai, I’ll sew in this poem from Mahmoud Darwish, generally regarded as Palestine’s national poet.  Again, I’ve chosen a simple lyric but one with tremendous resonance, especially now.  He, too, is a poet whose resume overflows with honors, but I’ll highlight just one: he was the author of the Palestinian Declaration of Independence which formally brought that state into being.

 

I Come From There

     by Mahmoud Darwish

 

I come from there and I have memories
Born as mortals are, I have a mother
And a house with many windows,
I have brothers, friends,
And a prison cell with a cold window.
Mine is the wave, snatched by sea-gulls,
I have my own view,
And an extra blade of grass.
Mine is the moon at the far edge of the words,
And the bounty of birds,
And the immortal olive tree.
I walked this land before the swords
Turned its living body into a laden table.
I come from there. I render the sky unto her mother
When the sky weeps for her mother.
And I weep to make myself known
To a returning cloud.
I learnt all the words worthy of the court of blood
So that I could break the rule.
I learnt all the words and broke them up
To make a single word: Homeland...

 

Two poets from the Abrahamic tradition––whose lineage, according to the Old Testament and the Koran, is inextricably intertwined (as are their futures.)  And each attempted during their lifetimes to create lyrics that would imagine what peace might look like for their peoples––even as their two governments continued to wage endless war.

 

The French poet quoted at the start of this Letter fought in what came to be known as the “Albigensian crusade.”  Backed by hardline Cistercians, Pope Innocent III offered lands to northern rulers who would attack those aristocrats in places like Albi, Toulouse, Caracasonne, considered too lax in their ‘tolerance of heretics’ (read: Muslims and Jews.)  The poet goes on to say: “I don’t want to ride out/ and burn places down,/ and so I really hate going to war/ and the battle cries/ and piling up great pillage/ and robbing people;/ it’s a crazy enough business/ to waste everything;/ for little gain/ the masters in charge counseled with lies/ start wars and disputes.”  Sound familiar?  The French poet dreams of spending time before a warm fire, sipping in comfort, and relishing the simple pleasure of peace.  As do the Israelis and the Palestinians––as do we all.  And yet someone in power always seems to know the perfect lever to pull in order to threaten our children, our goats, our homeland––to convince us that taking up arms and attacking our enemies will ultimately grant us what we most desire…even though all that’s ever been delivered is more bloodshed, more suffering.  Today, I’m allowing these songs to play inside my mind, finding connections I hadn’t made before.  I’m offering them to your attention as well.  May some wisdom, somewhere, arise from these ashes.

 

 

 

The Red Letters

 

* 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

 

And coming soon:

a new website to house all the Red Letter archives at StevenRatiner.com

Thursday, December 25, 2025

Conversation between poets Allen Ginsberg and Doug Holder ( AI Generated)

 

You know back in the 70's in college I had a chance to interview Allen Ginsberg for my campus radio show. He politely declined. So, I asked AI to create a conversation between us...my Christmas Gift to myself:

The Scene
Setting: A booth at Bloc 11 Café in Somerville, MA. Doug has a bagel and a notebook; Allen has a cup of herbal tea and his harmonium resting on the bench beside him.

Doug Holder: Allen, it’s a trip to finally have you across the table. I tried to get you on my radio show back in the 70s—I was just a kid at SUNY then—but you were busy howling at the world. I ended up reading your stuff to psychiatric patients at McLean Hospital for thirty years instead.

Allen Ginsberg: (Chuckling, peering over his glasses) To the "madmen," Doug? The "best minds" I saw destroyed by starvation, hysterical, naked? That’s a noble pursuit. Most people want to lock the madness away, but a poet’s job is to transcribe the data of the soul, especially when the soul is under duress. How did they take to the "Howl" in the wards?

Doug Holder: It was a mixed bag. I remember one guy walking out of a workshop because he said, "Why do I have to hear this? I live with it." It taught me that poetry isn't just about the "shouted breath"; sometimes it’s about the quiet grief of a guy eating a bagel at Bickford’s. I’ve always been drawn to the "poseur" in all of us—the small, gritty details of the street.

Allen Ginsberg: (Nodding) That’s the William Carlos Williams influence. No ideas but in things! The bagel is as holy as the seraphim. If you can see the holiness in a Somerville coffee shop or a hospital hallway, you’re doing the work. But tell me—you’ve spent decades in the "Paris of New England." Does the Muse still survive in the face of all this gentrification and digital noise?

Doug Holder: It’s harder. I see the old "barfly" poets being replaced by condos. But that’s why I started Ibbetson Street Press—to give the small-press guys, the ones who aren't "academic darlings," a place to scream or whisper. You were the king of the small press, Allen. You and City Lights broke the door down for all of us.

Allen Ginsberg: It’s all about the sangha, the community. You don't write in a vacuum. You write for your friends, for the ghosts of Whitman and Blake, and for the guy sitting next to you on the subway. Is that what you’re doing with your "Poet to Poet" show? Creating a record of the breath?

Doug Holder: Exactly. I want to capture the creative process before it evaporates. I’ve interviewed everyone from Piri Thomas to local street poets. I’m interested in the "un-pigeonhole-able" poet. You once said, "First thought, best thought." I try to apply that to the interviews—get to the raw, unedited truth of why we bother to string words together when the world is falling apart.

Allen Ginsberg: (Placing a hand on his harmonium) The world is always falling apart, Doug. That’s why we have to keep the rhythm. The breath is the only thing that belongs to us. Whether you’re at the Grolier Poetry Book Shop or in a locked ward, the syllable is a form of liberation. Don't be afraid of the "poseur" label—we’re all just wearing masks until the poem strips them off.

Doug Holder: I’ll drink to that—or at least finish my coffee to it. You know, they gave me an award in your name recently—the Allen Ginsberg Community Service Award.

Allen Ginsberg: (Grinning) Well then, you're officially part of the lineage. Just don't let the award gather dust. Use it as a permit to keep being a nuisance to the status quo. Now, tell me about this "Bagel Bard" group of yours... I think I could have used a good poppy seed bagel back in the East Village