15
The chemlab flash fired in a sunburst
of eyebrows and steam, the alarms claiming
the end of class, the sprinklers playing April,
and happy singees coughing into the sunlight.
Learning seeps in, pore-wise, or explodes in-
appropriately in the absence of
loco parentals. So under dormers,
beneath graduation gift patchwork quilts,
the love of clear-cut classes multiplies
beyond reason, without regard, ungraded,
and altogether traditionally.
If by the next day the glass is swept up,
the puddles all expunged, the windows boarded,
youth blooms eternal, for a little while.
Poems by Richard Epstein. Not much commentary, only one picture (sorry, Alice), and little disruption: just a place to find poems by Richard Epstein
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Friday, February 17, 2012
Google's quote of the day,
from Flannery O'Connor: Everywhere I go I'm asked if I think the university stifles writers. My opinion is that they don't stifle enough of them.
Thank you, Ms O'Connor.
Thank you, Ms O'Connor.
Thursday, February 02, 2012
If you have to choose
Well, yes, you can find me on Facebook, and I'll be happy to note your favorite movies and relationship status; but if your time is limited, and you have to choose, visit me here. Here be poems.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Nepotism? Anyone?
If any of you regular readers (you know who you are, all 3 of you) have close family members who are like Carly Simon's father, don't be embarrassed to point them in this direction. I'm like Arlo Guthrie -- "I'm not proud...or tired."
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
For Dr Feldman: After Martial
Your standards, Burton, force you to condemn
A verse not passed into an apothegm.
Forgive me, will you, if I do not die
To earn the moist approval of your eye.
A verse not passed into an apothegm.
Forgive me, will you, if I do not die
To earn the moist approval of your eye.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Expunging the visible world
From an obit for Helen Frankenthaler in the WSJ:
Frankenthaler belonged to the second generation of the New York School, whose guiding light was the critic Clement Greenberg. Greenberg held that the essence of modern painting was the expunging of all references to the visible world and an emphasis on painting's purely formal elements—the flatness of the canvas support and the colors arrayed across it.
I post this just in case you're lying awake at night, wondering why "modern painting" doesn't interest me.
Frankenthaler belonged to the second generation of the New York School, whose guiding light was the critic Clement Greenberg. Greenberg held that the essence of modern painting was the expunging of all references to the visible world and an emphasis on painting's purely formal elements—the flatness of the canvas support and the colors arrayed across it.
I post this just in case you're lying awake at night, wondering why "modern painting" doesn't interest me.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
From the mailbag:
The end of the year does not mean the mailbag is overflowing with copies of Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners.
"RHE, have you ever wonder why nobody cares? Maybe because no one can understand ennything you say?"
I have. There was this one guy, once, who understood something I said, but he died.
"Yo, could you write a sestina about Un ballo in maschera ?"
Yo. No.
"Who's better, Auden or Frost?"
Lou Brock. I'd give up Ernie Broglio just to get him on my team.
"RHE, have you ever wonder why nobody cares? Maybe because no one can understand ennything you say?"
I have. There was this one guy, once, who understood something I said, but he died.
"Yo, could you write a sestina about Un ballo in maschera ?"
Yo. No.
"Who's better, Auden or Frost?"
Lou Brock. I'd give up Ernie Broglio just to get him on my team.
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
The Year in Review
I did not win the Nobel Prize for Literature.
I did not get a 10-year extension from the Angels (or, come to think of it, the Devils).
I am not going to be the Republican nominee. Probably.
I did not read any of my poems at the Super Bowl halftime show. (N.B. I have written new poems since then.)
Neither Brad Pitt nor Tilda Swinton is playing me in a new biopic. (On the plus side, neither is Cee Lo Green nor The Swedish Chef.)
My new budget is deadlocked in committee. If it isn't passed (and funded) soon, I may have to shut down.
Last time I looked, at least 3 of the authors on the NYT bestseller list were dead. (In several more cases one just couldn't tell.) This offers me promise for the future.
I did not get a 10-year extension from the Angels (or, come to think of it, the Devils).
I am not going to be the Republican nominee. Probably.
I did not read any of my poems at the Super Bowl halftime show. (N.B. I have written new poems since then.)
Neither Brad Pitt nor Tilda Swinton is playing me in a new biopic. (On the plus side, neither is Cee Lo Green nor The Swedish Chef.)
My new budget is deadlocked in committee. If it isn't passed (and funded) soon, I may have to shut down.
Last time I looked, at least 3 of the authors on the NYT bestseller list were dead. (In several more cases one just couldn't tell.) This offers me promise for the future.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
From the Mailbag
Dear Dr. or Professor Epstein,
Is marriage between two siblings, one adopted and one birth, forbidden by the consanguinity laws?
Who exactly do you think I am? In any event, I'd refer all such questions to Jerry Lee Lewis and Dick Clark.
RHE--
How long are you going to keep this up?
How long you got?
RHEpoems,
WTF?
Try a comma after the W.
Is marriage between two siblings, one adopted and one birth, forbidden by the consanguinity laws?
Who exactly do you think I am? In any event, I'd refer all such questions to Jerry Lee Lewis and Dick Clark.
RHE--
How long are you going to keep this up?
How long you got?
RHEpoems,
WTF?
Try a comma after the W.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
From the mailbag
Are you for real?
No, I'm really not.
I like your poems very much and they sound intelligent but I don't understand them. What do you think I should do?
Read them just because you like them. I understand them, mostly, and it hasn't helped me all that much.
Are you available for children's parties and bat mitzvahs?
Sorry, I can't do balloon animals. The screechy sound the balloons make paralyzes my central nervous system.
No, I'm really not.
I like your poems very much and they sound intelligent but I don't understand them. What do you think I should do?
Read them just because you like them. I understand them, mostly, and it hasn't helped me all that much.
Are you available for children's parties and bat mitzvahs?
Sorry, I can't do balloon animals. The screechy sound the balloons make paralyzes my central nervous system.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
From the Mailbag
Here and at the other places where I read your comments you are such a know it all. You think you know everything don't you?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
From the mailbag:
RHE, you've got a lot of gaul.
Yes, they said that to Caesar, too. Come see me again in March, sometime around the Ides.
I took one of your poems to class. My teacher said it was blank. I told her it wasn't and tried to show her, but she is a teacher and does not listen.
Many teachers are honorable practitioners of a noble profession. Not all. You should have told her it was a printer error.
Why do you like Kipling so much?
Aw, come on--this is just too easy.
RHE
Yes, they said that to Caesar, too. Come see me again in March, sometime around the Ides.
I took one of your poems to class. My teacher said it was blank. I told her it wasn't and tried to show her, but she is a teacher and does not listen.
Many teachers are honorable practitioners of a noble profession. Not all. You should have told her it was a printer error.
Why do you like Kipling so much?
Aw, come on--this is just too easy.
RHE
Thursday, September 08, 2011
Poetry Proper 3
is now available online. I'll bet you can't imagine why I'm telling you this.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/64246923/Poetry-Proper-3rd-Issue
http://www.scribd.com/doc/64246923/Poetry-Proper-3rd-Issue
Thursday, September 01, 2011
Following
Thanks to those who, mysteriously, are "following" this blog, especially since I know almost none of you, so, as Gatsby might say, there's nothing merely personal about it. Much obliged.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Today's Reading
Said Job, It's tough but someone has to do it.
He boiled. His kids went AWOL. And the grass
Shrank as if cursed, a mumbo-jumbo lawn.
A snapshot of its photosynthesis
Was all he had: he propped it on the mantel.
The mantel broke. The rooftree split. His wife
Yelled and drank and tore up the laundry room
And split for Abu Dhabi. Praise the Lord,
Said Job, who had the faith, a nasty rash,
And more regrets than camels. Said the Lord,
Aha. This was a test. Had it been real,
The seas would have been emptied, deserts spun
Like bubbles in a centrifuge. His kids
Returned for dinner, fired up their bongs,
And lived in expectation. Job believed,
Yet noticed that his lawn was not the same.
He boiled. His kids went AWOL. And the grass
Shrank as if cursed, a mumbo-jumbo lawn.
A snapshot of its photosynthesis
Was all he had: he propped it on the mantel.
The mantel broke. The rooftree split. His wife
Yelled and drank and tore up the laundry room
And split for Abu Dhabi. Praise the Lord,
Said Job, who had the faith, a nasty rash,
And more regrets than camels. Said the Lord,
Aha. This was a test. Had it been real,
The seas would have been emptied, deserts spun
Like bubbles in a centrifuge. His kids
Returned for dinner, fired up their bongs,
And lived in expectation. Job believed,
Yet noticed that his lawn was not the same.
Saturday, July 16, 2011
from the mailbag
Yes, I can write limericks. As it happens, I had occasion to improvise a couple this week. No, I rarely do, and I don't think the local paper would be interested. Perhaps Posterity will publish my occasional verses as the final volume of my Collected Works. After all the Major Poems, of course.
I get some very odd emails.
I get some very odd emails.
Tuesday, July 05, 2011
The Scrambled Egg Principle
It has been justly observed, that discord generally operates in little things; it is inflamed to its utmost vehemence by contrariety of taste, oftener than of principles
--Johnson, Rambler 99
I had a girlfriend once who liked her eggs scrambled hard. I liked mine scrambled loose. Instead of saying that we liked our eggs cooked differently, she insisted that she scrambled eggs correctly; I scrambled them wrong. From this I derived the Scrambled Egg Principle: Do not elevate differences of taste into differences of principle. I see that, as usual, Johnson has anticipated me.
--Johnson, Rambler 99
I had a girlfriend once who liked her eggs scrambled hard. I liked mine scrambled loose. Instead of saying that we liked our eggs cooked differently, she insisted that she scrambled eggs correctly; I scrambled them wrong. From this I derived the Scrambled Egg Principle: Do not elevate differences of taste into differences of principle. I see that, as usual, Johnson has anticipated me.
Friday, June 17, 2011
You Call This a Miracle
The sun shines, the stars shine, the breezes blow.
Yes, yes, the grasses do their stuff: they grow.
Leaves cycle through their tricks: first come, then go.
I'll bet the brook is babbling, birds are tweeting.
M. Nature, smiling, seems to bear repeating
With equanimity. Wow. It's just like meeting
Old Uncle Albert, who keeps telling stories
Worn when Trajan, new to his martial glories,
Heard them and giggled. As do all old tories,
Then praise the miracle of repetition.
And you are dead and given up to fission.
The oldest story. Used without permission.
Yes, yes, the grasses do their stuff: they grow.
Leaves cycle through their tricks: first come, then go.
I'll bet the brook is babbling, birds are tweeting.
M. Nature, smiling, seems to bear repeating
With equanimity. Wow. It's just like meeting
Old Uncle Albert, who keeps telling stories
Worn when Trajan, new to his martial glories,
Heard them and giggled. As do all old tories,
Then praise the miracle of repetition.
And you are dead and given up to fission.
The oldest story. Used without permission.
Friday, May 06, 2011
Marcus Antonius
I threw it all away for love,
They say, but never what "it" is,
More important than what I kept,
Some qua superior to bliss,
That never, ever rhymes with "dove,"
And much more manly. Jesus wept.
You ever ride in a trireme, bud?
Better to fall on your sword or asp.
Drink while you can. Our day was done
The instant Old Baldy learned his grasp
Would not slip though slick with blood.
She can be my Rubicon.
They say, but never what "it" is,
More important than what I kept,
Some qua superior to bliss,
That never, ever rhymes with "dove,"
And much more manly. Jesus wept.
You ever ride in a trireme, bud?
Better to fall on your sword or asp.
Drink while you can. Our day was done
The instant Old Baldy learned his grasp
Would not slip though slick with blood.
She can be my Rubicon.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Late last evening
"Uh...Mr....uh...Upstum, this is Obviously Phony Name at Market Research Interminable with a short survey about your political opinions."
"I'm not an Anarcho-Syndicalist."
"So are you planning on voting in the upcoming mayoral election?"
"I'm not an Anarcho-Syndicalist. I'm not even a Wobbly. And I can't spell Czolgosz."
"All right. Well, Mr....uh...Ippstern, how would you rate the possibility you will be voting for Chris Romer in the upcoming mayoral election--absolutely certain, probably absolutely certain, or maybe absolutely certain?"
"If I can't vote for Baxter B. Stiles, I'm not voting. Goodbye."
"I'm not an Anarcho-Syndicalist."
"So are you planning on voting in the upcoming mayoral election?"
"I'm not an Anarcho-Syndicalist. I'm not even a Wobbly. And I can't spell Czolgosz."
"All right. Well, Mr....uh...Ippstern, how would you rate the possibility you will be voting for Chris Romer in the upcoming mayoral election--absolutely certain, probably absolutely certain, or maybe absolutely certain?"
"If I can't vote for Baxter B. Stiles, I'm not voting. Goodbye."
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