Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Starless And Bible-Black


Needed to hear this for some reason.  Maybe I should watch the whole production again.

the dark that, just past twilight, overtakes a canyon

Entire Known World So Far:

What’s meant to be wind emerges from what’s
presumably a god’s mouth, as if  people
thought that way, once, as I have read they did,
though I have never believed it. Yes,
the stag inexplicably there, on a raft
at sea, how the light catches in the runneled
fur of a dog’s underpaws as he steers
across dream; yes, the gods and their
signs, if you want, everywhere—

but the wind is the wind. The map makes
the world seem like a human body
when it’s been stripped and you can finally
see it for the world it is: plunderable—

almost, in places, as if asking for it—

who wouldn’t want to lay waste to it,
the map suggests, suggest the hands
that made the map, with the kind of
grace that proves grace can
be a sturdiness, too.

Carl Phillips.

Monday, April 20, 2026

В наших глазах звёздная ночь


In our eyes, a starry night.

A true friend is one soul in two bodies.

Theories of the Soul:

Kant says, transcendental
    idealism. In Aquinas,

we exist apart from bodies
    but only on Thursdays

when his famous ox
    flies by the window

wiser at Cologne
    where Albertus Magnus,

his real name, appoints
    Aquinas to magister studentium,

master of students. Aquinas
    is petrified but says yes.

He feels his soul
    sailing out of his head

floating near the roof
    where a blue ox wings by.

On Wednesday, two bodies
    are one soul

waking at sunrise
    thanks to the pineal gland

of Descartes, who thinks
    this node in the brain

is a tiny sugar cone
    or salted peanut,

the seat of the soul
    while Aristotle points

to the chopping
    ax as a teleology

as if the ax were a living,
    breathing person

which it isn’t.
    Heraclitus, air and fire

while Aquinas objects, no
    not an ax but ox.

If you’re a bird or soul
    I am only one mile

from the sea. If you
    are a soul in two bodies

life is more complex
    and we must labor

twice the field of sorrow
    after sleep, bath, and a glass

as Aquinas whispers, the things
    we love tell us who we are.

Karen An-hwei Lee.