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IMG_9629, flower
. .
[with two prose poems by Mark Cox]
. .
Poem at Forty I Could Not Finish Until I Turned Sixty
. .
The seas below our house pitch deep and soundless. Like sweat engrained in handrails, or the oil darkened edges of our dining room table, every shadow implies more shadow.
. .
Late summer has quieted the cicadas, damped their dwindling number with the lastness of their deaths. There is a chill to the air, no wind at all. My youngest son is twenty days old, feeble, burrowing in and out of awareness, still unsure his body isn’t trying to kill him. He cries to eat, he cries to sleep, he cries as his tiny gut rejects what all must go to waste.
. .
Last week, scientists discovered the bones of a humanoid who fell into a well shaft three million years ago. His wife said he’d turn up! That the world has no pity for the individual life, this is no secret to anyone, yet we just can’t get over it. I am here in the middle of a bed, in the middle of the night, in the middle of my life, my son nestled as if he were my own bones, as if we’ve both toppled forty years down into positions we’ll retain forever. There is no chiropractor for the soul.
. .
The museum of loss has at last opened its doors to me. Scholars cannot agree, the docents say, but almost certainly arms encircling the body was an omen of intimacy. Little is known of the fabled kiss; what remains of crude glyphs and mosaic shards indicate our elders once believed that souls were exchanged. One cannot, of course, touch anything in the museum of oss. One can only view what was once there. Nothing can be imagined and remain the same.
. .
Just what does this portend? There will always be a thermos next to the detonator, a pair of reading glasses weighting the sentence handed down without mercy. An airman in WWII, John Ciardi recounted how once from the blister all gunners sat in, he watched the bomber beside him burning. His counterpart waved up as that other plane went down.
. .
Each age has its designated bandwidth. Without warning, my son is twenty and in love. We are belted in. Splitting space. In his lap, he holds one hand with another, as if to keep its fingers from detaching, as if I’d helped him hurry to the car, and was driving to a hospital. I want my tree back the way it was, he whined, one autumn morning. He was four or so and knew even then what he’s now not able to share.
. .
Much is felt that resists being known. If there are seven billion human beings on earth, then every day is 19 million years of experience, just all at once. Somehow, I find this comforting, though by now you’d think we’d know what we are doing.
. .
Mark Cox
from Knowing, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; © 2024
. .
. .
❦ ❦ ❦
. .
Better to resist the flux and believe that something stays. At last, he thinks, that is his answer. How still it all is, so utterly clear. Then one bright leaf lets go and changes everything.
++++++Knowing, Mark Cox
. .
It all begins with a question. No, that comes second, first there’s noticing, and noticing that something is different. Wait, even before the noticing there has to be paying attention. No, no, it all begins with this: just being there, moving through the world, part of all the changes.
. .
Joe just texted Cynthia and me a remarkable photo taken along a path we’ve walked together more than a few times. Looks like Bloodroot – nothing else has those freaky leaves emerging from the earth like fingers of the undead – but the petals are different. Instead of a circle of daisy-like petals (radial symmetry) they are bunched and doubled. And the center is almost naked as a belly button.
. .
A hybrid, we ask ourselves? But there are no other species in genus Sanguinaria with which to hybridize. A mutant, then. Sure enough, we discover online images of Bloodroot Multiplex with these peony-like blossoms, all of them propagated from a spontaneous mutation first discovered in Ohio years ago. Sterile flowers in which the stamens have reverted to petals. Evolution amok. Now we have the same mutation here in our backyard.
. .
. .
Plants that make flowers first appear in the fossil record 360 million years ago. Their flowers left the seeds exposed – they were naked (gymnosperms = conifers and gingko). Gymnosperms ruled for over 200 million years until the first flowering plants evolved forms that keep their seeds enclosed. But the outcome of the mutations that eventually resulted in plants with such protected seeds, angiosperms, was so successful that they have filled the earth with their variety and diversity. Every plant you see with flowers blooming this spring is an angiosperm (and even a lot whose flowers you don’t see, like grass for goodness sake).
. .
The enclosing ovary which cradles the ovule which will become the seed – what an excellent evolutionary idea! It most likely developed from mutations in fertile leaves which caused progressive curling and enfolding. All the parts of the flower – sepal, petal, stamen – are specialized modified leaves. But whenever we discover a Bloodroot flower with more than eight petals, we can assume that some of the extra petals are stamens which have turned back the evolutionary clock to become petals again.
. .
Is there anything we can hold on to that stays, fixed and static? Is it even possible to imagine something that never changes? Do I even really know what I think I know?
. .
. .
There is only one thing that each and every one of us knows. Mark Cox reminds us what it is in Knowing – it’s something no one likes to talk about, but something Mark’s poetry is able to face and say in a hundred ways until we readers become more than willing to join the conversation. We’ve known it all along, maybe at times we’ve even braced for the brief plunge toward otherness, but in these prose poems we have a guide and a friend who is just as afraid as we are but braver about sharing his fear.
. .
Does a prose poem occupy some evolutionary niche between verse and narrative? Forget its phenotype: brevity, blockiness, absent linebreaks. What’s down deeper in its DNA? It seems to carry all the genes of its poetry forebears – language and imagery, rhythm and music, even internal rhyme – but it is its own genus. Unlike a story, it has no beginning, middle, and end – it is all middle. Crisis and denouement might embrace each other in the same line. (And can we even call them lines when they are all one? Sort of like the question how many grooves there are  on a 33 ⅓ rpm LP.) In the poem, everything is happening, but how is it happening? Oh wait, as I read the poem everything is happening in me.
. .
And what happens in me over and over as I read these poems, as it dawns on me that the one thing we all know, each and every one of us, is that we will die, is this: I look up from the page and talk to myself. I query, I wonder, I argue, I confess. I pick up the threads of so many internal conversations left dangling because they were difficult, or scary, or just pushed out of the present by quotidian distractions. I’m not saying that by reading a book by Mark Cox titled Knowing I have gained or been granted my own cosmic knowing. But I have been reminded that I want to.
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Music Box
++ For Ralph Angel
. .
Everything’s just peachy, comes the world report: all clear. We are not pirouetting on the tip of time’s scalpel; we are not screwing deeper into the ground’s veneer. It is just the fleeting dance we do until the delicate box closes, having learned now to bow before hurting ourselves.
. .
Today is Thursday once again and the man next door is off to get his mail. He will wander back reading, as is his wont to do, his wizened leashed dachshund dog sniffing the leaves. The breeze passes over our shrubs and still they stand. A wary sparrow peers from them be we shouldn’t call it hiding.
. .
Yes, we have learned how to brace for the brief plunge toward otherness. We have learned to keep our eyes open to the dark, even if it doesn’t matter. We see most vividly what cannot be seen, and this is always the case.
. .
In the caves of our past, flames flickered on the rough walls. Fear grew there beyond reason and all sense of proportion. Our shadows have always been bigger than we are, the house lights shining up as they do, not down.
. .
It would make sense to be offered a tune now. Something simple and genuine, a tale of longing fulfilled. Something to do with a childhood nightlight, a mother’s cool palm. Whatever it is, it will have to be a memory wound long ago.
. .
Such a blessing might be broadcast from just about anywhere. We receive it on this bureau with no clue wherefrom it issues, which ancient satellite or lofty transmission tower. On and off like a warning beacon, the message beams. Once all is said, one has no choice but to choose. Call it grace, call it wonder, just, as they say, keep it calling.
. .
Mark Cox
from Knowing, Press 53, Winston-Salem NC; © 2024
Music Box first appeared in The Connecticut River Review
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Mark Cox is chair of the Department of Creative Writing at University of North Carolina, Wilmington. He also teaches in the Vermont College of Fine Arts MFA Program. His six previous books include Sorrow Bread: Poems 1984-2015 (2017) and Readiness (2018). Read more about and purchase Knowing at Press 53 HERE
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IMG_0768, tree

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[with 3 poems from The Ecopoetry Anthology]
 . 
First Verse
 . 
I admit the world remains almost beautiful.
The dung beetles snap on their iridescent jackets
despite the canine holiness of the Vatican
and, despite the great predatory surge of industry,
two human hands still mate like butterflies
when buttoning a shirt.
++++++++++++++++ Some mornings
I take myself away from the television
and go outside where the only news comes
as fresh air folding over the houses.
And I feel glad for an hour in which race
and power and all the momentum of history
add up to nothing
 . 
As if from all the mad grinding
in my brain, a single blue lily had grown –
my skull open like a lake. I can hear
an insect sawing itself into what must be
a kind of speech.
++++++++++++ I know there is little
mercy to be found among us, that we have
already agreed to go down fighting, but
I should be more amazed: look
at the blood and guess who’s holding
the knives. Shouldn’t we be more
amazed? Doesn’t the view
just blister your eyes?
 . 
To have come this long way, to stand
on two legs, to be ++ not tarantulas
or chimpanzees ++ but soldiers of our own
dim-witted enslavement. To utterly miss the door
to the enchanted palace. To see myself
coined into a stutter. To allow the money
to brand us ++ and the believers
to blindfold our lives.
+++++++++++++++ In the name
of what? If that old book was true
the first verse would say ++ Embrace
 . 
the world. ++ Be friendly. ++ The forests
are glad you breathe.
 . 
I see now
The Earth itself does have a face.
If it could say I ++ it would
plead with the universe, the way
dinosaurs once growled
at the stars.
++++++++ It’s like
the road behind us is stolen
completely ++ so the future can
never arrive. So, look at this: look
what we’ve done. With all
we knew.
With all we knew
that we knew.
 . 
Tim Seibles
from The Ecopoetry Anthology, edited by Ann Fisher Wirth and Laura-Gray Street; Trinity University Press, San Antonio, TX; © 2020
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
I bend to pinch off a few stems as I walk down the drive beside the school. What is this tiny blossom? Four petals no bigger than a sliver of fingernail, lavender, pointed and neat. Whorl of slender leaves. Poking up through asphalt where it hugs the brick wall. I finger the hand lens in my pocket.
 . 
By the time I reach the ball field where the middle schoolers are at recess, I’ve gathered a mini-bouquet of the usual suspects: blue violets, henbit, deadnettle, bittercress. Their teacher turns them over to me and I lay out the plan, an hour and a half of Science Friday. Each takes their little paper cup and we spread out. The neglected. The overlooked. The beautiful in their own tiny tiny way – these are our quarry.
 . 
Sure, most folks would say we’re gathering weeds, and in a minute we’ll discuss that word, “weed,” something growing where it isn’t wanted. For now we scour the waste places, along the storage shed and storm fence, within the winter-brown kudzu invading from the ditch. Their cups fill up with yellow, pink, lavender, blue. After half an hour we sit down at the picnic tables behind the school; I pass around magnifying glasses and ask them to draw a tiny tiny flower as large as they can make it. And they do!
 . 
Are these kids listening while I talk about taxonomy and plant families, about native versus introduced, about flower anatomy of the little mints and asters we’ve discovered? Whether they are or not, I’m pretty confident that there will be days in the future when they look down at their feet and notice something they never paid attention to before.
 . 
It becomes a habit, this paying attention. I can’t not see them now. These tiny tiny flowers are not in my lawn – they are my lawn. OK, sometimes I pull up the mock strawberry and the bittercress when they crowd my “flowers,” and I do dig dandelions out of the front walk, but I’ll not curse them for their tenacity. Instead, I’ll do my best not to make them feel unwanted. I’ll resist the impulse to call them weeds.
 . 
 . 
 . 
Here’s what you’d discover in the mini-bouquet from our paper cups:
 . 
Henbit +++++ Lamia amplexicaule
Deadnettle +++++ Lamia purpurea
Creeping Charlie +++++ Glechoma hederacea
Common Blue Violet +++++ Viola sororia
American Field Pansy +++++ Viola bicolor
Common Dandelion +++++ Taraxacum officinale
Common Groundsel +++++ Senecio vulgaris
Hairy Bittercress +++++ Cardamine hirsuta
Smallflower Fumewort +++++ Corydalis micantha
Yellow Fumewort +++++ Corydalis flavula
Cut-leaved Crane’s-bill +++++ Geranium dissectum
Early Buttercup +++++ Ranunculus fascicularis
Mock Strawberry +++++ Potentilla indica
Common Chickweed +++++ Stellaria media
 . 
And my tiny tiny lavender blossom, the one you wouldn’t even notice for a flower within its handful of green if you hadn’t knelt before it?
Field Madder +++++ Sherardia arvensis
A member of the same family as my all time favorite plant genus, Coffea.
 . 
 . ❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Scilla
 . 
Not I, you idiot, not self, but we, we – waves
of sky blue like
a critique of heaven: why
do you treasure your voice
when to be one thing
is to be next to nothing?
Why do you look up? To hear
an echo like the voice
of god? You are all the same to us,
solitary, standing above us, planning
 . 
your silly lives: you go
where you ware sent, like all things,
where the wind plants you,
one or another of you forever
looking down and seeing some image
of water, and hearing what? Waves,
and over waves, birds singing.
 . 
Louise Glück
from The Ecopoetry Anthology, edited by Ann Fisher Wirth and Laura-Gray Street; Trinity University Press, San Antonio, TX; © 2020
Scilla, in English also called Squill, is a genus of bulb-forming lily-like flowers that spread in a carpet of blossoms.
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
The Lilies Break Open Over the Dark Water
 . 
Inside
+ that mud-hive, that gas sponge,
+ + that reeking
+ + + leaf yard, that rippling
 . 
dream-bowl, the leeches’
+ flecked and swirling
+ + broth of life, as rich
+ + + as Babylon,
 . 
the fists crack
+ open and the wands
+ + of the lilies
+ + + quicken, they rise
 . 
like pale poles
+ with their wrapped beaks of lace;
+ + one day
+ + + they tear the surface,
 . 
the next they break open
+ over the dark water.
+ + And there you are,
+ + + on the shore,
 . 
fitful and thoughtful, trying
+ to attach them to an idea –
+ + some news of your own life.
+ + + But the lilies
 . 
are slippery and wild – they are
+ devoid of meaning, they are
+ + simply doing,
+ + + from the deepest
 . 
spurs of their being,
+ what they are impelled to do
+ + every summer.
+ + + And so, dear sorrow, are you.
 . 
Mary Oliver
from The Ecopoetry Anthology, edited by Ann Fisher Wirth and Laura-Gray Street; Trinity University Press, San Antonio, TX; © 2020
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❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Tim Seibles (b. 1955) has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts; he teaches at Old Dominion University and in the Stonecoast MFA program, and leads workshops for the Cave Canem Foundation. First Verse appears in Buffalo Head Solos.
Louise Glück (1943-2023) received the Pulitzer Prize for The Wild Iris (1993), in which Scilla appears and won the 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature. She served as US Poet Laureate 2003-2004.
Mary Oliver (1935-2019) received the Pulitzer Prize for American Primitive (1984) and the National Book Award for New and Selected Poems (1992), in which The Lilies Break Open Over the Dark Water appears.
 . 
More about Trinity University Press and The Ecopoetry Anthology HERE
 . 
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Doughton Park Tree -- 5/1/2021

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[with 3 poems by Richard Allen Taylor]
 . 
What’s Happening?
+++ after Choices, a watercolor by Catherine Mainous
 . 
Of course, I recognize it right away,
this landscape where past and present
bleed into future, as I have bled,
as we all do. I start green and work
my way up, grasping at blue. Earth
always reaches for sky, the tiniest seed
pokes through saltmarsh and sawgrass,
green fingers periscopes looking for light.
I always look for dawn. No, that’s wrong.
Sometimes, I search for dark and find it.
The light comes later, after regret, guilt.
See how that diffused orange glare
in the corner blurs into a bridge
to nowhere, skeletal structure
never completed. That’s what
you get with unrequited ambition.
Beginning, middle, no end.
A purple cloud in the distance.
A crane untethered.
An unexpected answer
to an unexpected question.
 . 
Richard Allen Taylor
from Letters to Karen Carpenter, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC; © 2023
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
She doesn’t believe in inertia. If I take both hands off the wheel for a femtosecond, she’s convinced we will instantly swerve into the embankment.
 . 
She does believe in gravity. Since my last birthday she has forbidden me from using the stepladder to hang Christmas lights on the dwarf spruce in our front yard, much less reach to get the star on top.
 . 
She absolutely rejects Heisenberg’s principal of uncertainty. Whether I can detect them or not, my keys are fixed in place right where I left them.
 . 
She’s a little iffy on the conservation of angular momentum. If I accelerate into a curve to maintain a constant forward velocity, she wants to know why I’m speeding.
 . 
She accepts evolutionary biology without complaint but wanders from the straight and narrow of taxonomic hierarchy. Lizards and toads she seeks out as cute; snakes are OK only behind glass; spiders and gigantic roaches, even millipedes, she captures under a paper cup, slides a birthday card beneath, and relocates into the yard; fruit flies and ants must die.
 . 
And the law of love? It is, of course, not exclusively physics and biology. It also includes the law of culture and connection, of which she is founder and curator. When a particular issue of National Geographic reaches its twentieth birthday, she tears out each article worth saving and files it, astrophysics to zoology. She will let me re-read them if I but ask.
 . 
One more thing about the law of love: it seems to disobey Newton’s third law of motion. For each of my own actions – and how often they do violate something – there is a reaction, but thank God not opposite and equal. However sharp her initial glance and inflection, the ultimate consequence so far has been forgiveness. This is one universe I am happy to live in.
 . 
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❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
The Second Law of the Apple
 . 
If the first law was not to take
the first bite, lest you be banished
from the garden, the second law
ought to be to finish what you start,
 . 
meaning the first bite obligates you
to a second, and a third, and so on
until the apple is eaten, except
for the core, which contains
 . 
the seeds, and sine you will be
traveling anyway, away from
the garden that spit you out,
you might as well learn
 . 
banishment from one place is not
the end, but merely another beginning,
and what you do with the seeds
is everything.
 . 
Richard Allen Taylor
from Letters to Karen Carpenter, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC; © 2023
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Richard Allen Taylor is part of the holy jangle of things / fastened to the belt loop of a forgetful world. The poems in Letters to Karen Carpenter and Other Poems are able to weave from the commonplace and humbly wonderful things of this world a sweet sadness . . . droll observations . . . life-giving joy. And some good jokes.
 . 
We knew this first collection since Richard’s wife’s death from leukemia would build a house for grief and healing. Who knew that Karen Carpenter would lend such a hand, but Richard weaves remembrance and biography together into powerful metaphors for attachment and loss. These poems speak to grieving with the whispered voice of his late wife, Julie – a mellow bell rings in the canyon. / And the canyon is me – as well as in Richard’s own sure voice of seeking, his wisdom steadily revealed as one that doesn’t cry for answers but is happy to linger with the important questions. All the old questions / that rise in the wake of storms: each of us must confront and accept these questions if we are to be fully alive. Autumn fades, winter enfolds us, but the seasons continue to turn. At the end of everything is not sadness but wonder, friendship, and love.
 . 
 . 
Letters to Karen Carpenter and Other Poems is available from Main Street Rag HERE
 . 
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❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
I Write to You About Julie, My Wife
 . 
I named a star after her. Astronomers call it
HD 10180. Both Julies—the woman I remember
 . 
and her eponymous star—emit a kind and generous
light. The star deserves a name that twinkles, and she
 . 
deserves the star. I never called her HD 10180,
but often call the star Julie. I chose it out of billions
 . 
because, like you, Julie got along so well with others—
none of that blasting the neighbors with deadly gamma
 . 
ray bursts, the way some pulsars do. And like the star,
my wife, when she was alive, had a family that orbited
 . 
her adoringly. Astronomers have identified a possible
gas giant, designated HD 10180g, residing comfortably
 . 
in Julie’s habitable zone, and—though the giant’s crushing
gravity could never support planetary life, they may find
 . 
moons that do. Suspected of strong winds and colorful
bands, without Julie’s life-giving warmth and shine,
 . 
HD 10180g would be little more than a vast frozen cloud,
a derelict adrift in deep space. I wish I could point out Julie
 . 
to you, but it’s in the constellation Hydrus, which is only
observed from the Southern Hemisphere, and, though
 . 
brighter than our own sun, Julie resides one hundred and
twenty-seven light-years away. We’d need a telescope.
 . 
I understand your concern that the striking similarity
between the designations HD 10180 and HD 10180g
 . 
might confuse some observers. Don’t worry.
To anyone who ever saw us together, it’s obvious
 . 
I am the gas giant, and she is the star.
 . 
Richard Allen Taylor
from Letters to Karen Carpenter, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC; © 2023
 . 
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ECOPOETRY FOR EARTH DAY 2024
 . 
When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe.
  +++ — John Muir
 . 
VERSE & IMAGE is seeking poetry to celebrate Earth Day, April 22, throughout National Poetry Month. Do you have a favorite poem that speaks to universal interconnectedness, as in the above quotation? Send it to ecopoetry@griffinpoetry.com by April 10 and we may share it in one of several posts dedicated to living together on our living planet.
 . 
Please read these guidelines:
 . 
Deadline April 10, 2024, midnight Eastern Daylight Time USA
 . 
Send ONE poem by any author except yourself addressing the theme of connections.
 . 
Include the full text of the poem in the body of an email or as a .DOC or .RTF attachment to ecopoetry@griffinpoetry.com. Please add info about where the poem is published.
 . 
Also include a personal statement – how do you feel connected to this poem? What does it mean to you? How has it connected you to the earth? [suggest 100 words or so; may be edited for length]
 . 
Visit GriffinPoetry.com between April 15 and April 30 to see if your poem has been selected for presentation.
 . 
Optional: if you submit one poem by an author other than yourself, you may also submit one poem on the same theme that you have written. We prefer previously published – include acknowledgments.
 . 
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Doughton Park Tree 2021-03-23

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