DPF / Clampitt

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From kingfishers and queens to botanicals, another favorite.

from Botanical Nomenclature / by Amy Clampitt

toggled into a seawall scree,
these tuffets of skyweed
neighbored by a climbing tideline

DPF / Drayton

From lost people to lost loves.

from Nymphidia, The Court Of Fairy / by Michael Drayton

And tell how Oberon doth fare,
Who grew as mad as any hare,
When he had sought each place with care,
And found his queen was missing.

DPF / Pizarro Harman

from Rainbird / by Michele Pizarro Harman

Remembered, the glass, its contents, and the rain to write it while people, one by one, continue to steal away like birds.

DPF / Jonson

from To the Memory of My Beloved Master William Shakespeare / by Ben Jonson

And art alive still while thy book doth live,
And we have wits to read and praise to give.

DPF / Tennyson

And, nightmares remind me of mirrors and mirrors of Tennyson and Tennyson of the (fatal yet) essential moment in which she turns and looks directly at the world.

from The Lady of Shalott / by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

With a steady stony glance—
Like some bold seer in a trance,
Beholding all his own mischance,
Mute, with a glassy countenance —
      She look’d down to Camelot.

DPF / Pizarro Harman

Nightmares remind me of Galway Kinnell. Then, nightmares remind me of poetry.

from Daughter Bird Bone Song I / by Michele Pizarro Harman

                         the scene is cozy
              except for the man
                               running from fire

DPF / Kinnell

Fathers and daughters. More moon. And, another favorite, nightmares.

from Under the Maud Moon / by Galway Kinnell

And then
you shall open
this book, even if it is the book of nightmares.

DPF / Simic

Then, of course, there’s Simic with one of my other loves, those Greeks. Back to rivers, to the one where the moon sends only emissaries.

from Charon’s Cosmology / by Charles Simic

Once in a long while a mirror
Or a book which he throws
Overboard into the dark river
Swift and cold and deep

DPF / Strand

Moons make me think of Sylvia; but, since Sylvia’s had her turn for a time, here is one of Strand’s moons today.


from
The Prediction / by Mark Strand

That night, the moon drifted over the pond,
turning the water to milk, and under
the boughs of the trees, the blue trees,
a young woman walked, and for an instant

the future came to her

DPF / Dorris

from Snowflake Voodoo / by Kara Dorris

& when the snow speaks, she realizes no one listens