Li Yu
Translated from the Chinese by Arthur Sze
Silent and alone, I ascend the west tower.
The moon is like a hook.
In solitude, the wutong trees
imprison the clear autumn in the deep courtyard.
Scissored but not severed,
trimmed but still massive:
it is the sorrow of parting,
another strange flavor in the heart.
from the book THE SILK DRAGON II / Copper Canyon
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Emily Dickinson
"Emily Dickinson Was Not Such a Recluse After All"

"Above all, perhaps, there is Dickinson the gardener, full of reverent glee for the glories of the natural world. However reclusive she might have been, she clearly spent a great deal of time outside. After returning from eye treatment in Cambridge in 1865, she writes: ‘For the first few weeks I did nothing but comfort my plants, till now their small green cheeks are wreathed with smiles.’"

via THE SPECTATOR
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Cover image in black and white of Evelyn Reilly's book, Having Broken, Are
What Sparks Poetry:
Evelyn Reilly on "Having Broken, Are"


"I live in New York City and also down a dirt road in the country, and that dual existence is part of the 'reality' of both the title poem and the poem sequences that make up most of this book. I put 'reality' in quotation marks because all poems, I believe, are attempts to channel what Sun RA (who is also an interlocutor in this book) calls the 'impossible possible,' which is both a reality and not. Seeking possible words for impossible possibilities I take as one of poetry’s tasks."
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