This photo of a colossal door built by Emperor Hadrian at the Pantheon reminded me of Hadrian's never-ending passion for his dead boyfriend Antinous. So I wrote this new poem about meeting Hadrian's ghost at that giant door.
among the crowd:
Poems, work in progress, short reviews and random thoughts from an eccentric neoRomantic.
This photo of a colossal door built by Emperor Hadrian at the Pantheon reminded me of Hadrian's never-ending passion for his dead boyfriend Antinous. So I wrote this new poem about meeting Hadrian's ghost at that giant door.
by Brett Rutherford
In youth, you were the debauchee of verse.
You loved, and lost, and suffered
in order to fill
those stanzas
with blood and barbed-wire, grieving
in heart’s battle-fields.
Who would have thought
that you would make it to thirty,
or forty, or half a century?
Now, you must be a hierophant,
whose wine is tea, whose lust
must settle for the idea of beauty,
seizing nothing, yet owning all.
Now, others love, and lacking
the words, they turn to you,
thumbing the pages of your early errors,
seeking the fatal phrases
to hurl at those who reject them,
or the lines they will pen,
— ah! unattributed —
in that cryptic last note
the police will puzzle over.
You write where you are driven.
If here and there, some line
sets off the lover, the serial killer,
composer, or manifesto-vendor;
if someone draws or paints
your doomed or winged narrators,
these things are fine. You radiate
your poems into the cosmos.
Fame is the galloping horse
that flees the steady tread
of the Inquisitor. Your lines
in memory are antidote
to the banished texts, books burned
before the faithful's shaking fists.
Footnotes be damned! Let me live on
in a thousand epigraphs!
I have published the famous Wild Huntsman of Burger, as translated by Sir Walter Scott, and I have also adapted a Wild Huntsman poem by Victor Hugo. Here is another retelling of the legend, by German Romantic poet Ludwig Tieck:
The “ Wild Huntsman" of the Harz Mountains was also a cruel and profligate lord , who indulged in his passion for the chase without regard to the crops or even the lives of his vassals, or of the holy days set apart by the Church. He is firmly believed in by the peasant of the Black Forest, and many ballads have been written on this legend. The following is a translation of one of Tieck's poems:
THE WILD HUNTSMAN
By Ludwig Tieck
At the dead of the night the wild huntsman awakes
In the deepest recess of the forest's dark brakes;
He lists to the storm and arises in scorn,
He summons his hounds with his far -sounding horn.
He mounts his black steed; like the lightning they fly,
And sweep the hush'd forest with snort and with cry.
Loud neighs his black courser; hark! his horn how 'tis swelling;
He chases his comrades, his hounds wildly yelling
Speed along! Speed along! for the race is all ours;
Speed along! Speed along! while the midnight still lowers;
The spirits of darkness will chase him in scorn
Who dreads our wild howl and the shriek of our horn.
Thus yelling and belling they sweep on the wind,
The dread of the pious and reverent mind;
But all who roam gladly in forests at night,
This conflict of spirits will strangely delight.”
Unattributed translation, found in: From “Dogs of Legend and Romance.” M.F. O’Malley. Aunt Judy’s
Christmas Volume for 1879. Edited by H.K.F. Gatty. 1879. London: George Bell
& Son.
by Brett Rutherford
After a ballad by Felix Dahn
Gladly would I, as the other
dead, my grave in quiet keep;
Yet a curse, a ban eternal
makes me roam while mortals sleep.
Peaceful in the azure moonbeams
stand the vaults where others rest,
yet I, beneath my marble tombstone,
a burning pang within my breast
flow out and up, my dusty pinions
shaking as they set me free,
over hill and dale to wander,
unslaked yearnings driving me
to where my tender bride reposes,
in her dreams of a living lover.
I will hover, bat and shadow,
lightly falling from above her.
Now my black eyes, forever open
lock on her closed orbs, lashed shut;
now the candle flickers lower
as my wing-beat
snuffs it out.
I nearly faint from undead passion,
yet from here I cannot go.
She must join me ’ere the sunrise
join me in the realms below!
Well she knows my bite’s destruction.
Twice have I been here and gone.
In vain, in vain, the others warned her;
outside they pray, and watch for
dawn.
Slowly I feed, and take my pleasure,
vein to lips, and blood to throat.
Now I press the fatal signet
upon her breast, Undead,
unblessed, unsoul’d, unmourned,
I carry her off on night’s last zephyr,
so pale, so cold, forever-more.
Only an empty bed discover’d,
a drop of blood upon the floor,
a taper snuff’d, an unread prayer,
the garland of protective herbage,
the crucifix she shunned to wear.
Now hark! Beware! The cock is crowing.
They are calling out her name!
And though she whispers, “Father! Mother!”
She is far beyond their finding,
Back into my grave I burrow,
sliding aside my marble roof.
At sunset, on the hungry morrow,
side by side we’ll issue forth.
by Brett Rutherford
After a ballad by Kreuznach
Over the parched field one raven flew.
Keen was his eye, but nothing he found.
One comrade comes from the flock to join him.
“My coal-black friend, a word I pray.
What man shall give us our food this day?”
Quoth he: “Beyond the wood in Elfindale,
a lordly feast awaits us all.
Come follow me, to the gallow-tree
where the smell of blood I keen,
the blood of a hero, once brave and kind.”
“Ah!” cried his friend. “I will alert the host.
Who was the wretched man, and how his fall?” —
“Ask the knight’s falcon, who knew him well,
or ask the grieving charger on which he rode,
or better yet, ask of the wife at home alone
what name shall the tombstone call him.
The hawk speaks now, for he has flown
beyond the hunt and its dainty reward.
The horse now serves the murderer,
who rides and rides to the humble abode
where he will play with his enemy’s child,
and take the woman and lift her up
from weeping widow to his armor’d kiss.
Come, ravens wild! The feast is ours,
another banquet from human-kind!”
by Brett Rutherford
adapted from a Mingo Indian narrative
So,
I’m a duck. Get used to it.
Suwaek they call me
when I fly over the houses.
But duck will do. I’m good with that.
You
already know
that I talk a lot, quack,
quack, that’s just the way I am.
I can only do things one way.
I
talk when flying south;
I talk when coming back:
it’s all the same to you
except the way my bill
is pointing. One quack
is as good as another.
I
talk when someone tries
to bring me down with his gun.
I talk to the dog and tell him:
not this time, buster!
Talking
got my bill so dull.
No one would mistake
me for a hawk or an eagle.
I cannot rend my dinner,
But
akya'tíyú, I am beautiful!
The
handsome friend
you’re walking with,
enjoying so much chatter:
it might be me, you know,
talking
away in wood-shade,
making you tired from so much
walking. I’ll even make tea
from boneset if your leg hurts,
just
to keep our conversation
going, just to keep company
with a fellow talker. It’s almost ten
in the morning, and we have a ways
to
go. Just over there,
beyond the fir trees, we might,
if we are lucky, spot some
of the Little People I spoke of.
But
wait! A little pond!
Just let me rinse my toes first.
Ah! That’s better. Oh look:
there goes a snipe,
that brown spot, hardly moving!
So
nice to see a relative,
though with that beak
as long as a porcupine quill
he’s not much of a talker.
Look
over there! Not every day
you see a kingfisher fly down
and do his quack-quatic —
I mean aquatic —
dive-and-catch,
then quack —
I mean back — to the treetop
(excuse my stutter). I don’t mean
to repeat myself so much!
I’m
more than I’m quacked up
to be, you know. That ocean,
far off and many hills away:
one of us made that, you know.
We
stretched it out on a frame,
like a fish, drying. No big deal.
And all those islands
and continents? We made them!
Now
I know something
that you do not, since I have flown
all the way over and back,
across the whole ocean —
I’ll
bet you didn’t know
that people live there, too!
All upside down and quack-
backwards, but there they are!
You
can eat those berries:
the red ones, the blue ones.
Myself, I do not eat them.
You’d better not ask me why.
Let’s
walk a little more. From here
on forward the way is smooth
along the lake shore. There!
That’s what I wanted you to see:
a heron! Look at him go,
catching
that fish, as big
as my body, with his horned
war-club of a bill, so pleased
with himself he is!
Now
aren’t you glad
we took this walk together?
by Brett Rutherford
and I was only thinking
about the shakers of salt and pepper
that were standing side by side on a place mat.
I wondered if they had become friends.
— Billy Collins, “You, Reader”
A passionate essay written January 9th, with the facts-as-we-know-them about the right-wing lunatic attack on the U.S. Capitol. Pittsburgh writer Jonathan Aryeh Wayne sums up how we got to the catastrophe of January 6th, and profiles a number of the bizarre invaders who wreaked havoc in the Capitol. This is an urgent and angry essay. This free PDF pamphlet was produced the same day the author finished his article. This publication takes The Poet's Press back to its origins in underground newspaper publishing. Please download, read, and share this intense article -- while you still can.
This is the 293rd publication of The Poet's Press. 7 pages.
by Brett Rutherford
Somewhere in Union City
on a pot-holed side street
I stumble upon a crime scene.
It is not yet seven. No one
has entered the alleyway
that fronts the auto shop.
No one has seen her, naked,
flattened, it seems, by tires
that crushed her this way
and that. Her toothless mouth
is agape in the permanent “oh”
that must have frozen there
as she knew there’d be no mercy
from the circle of attackers.
The thing her mother told her
never to show to strangers
now greets the pigeons, the clouds,
and the imminent sun-rays.
She is so torn it seems
that dogs, and not a pack of men
had been at her. Her legs
are still apart, her shoes
might be some blocks away.
Running this way at midnight
she would have found no shelter.
The chain-link fence, the ripple
of the closed and corrugated shutters
gave her no place to hide.
They had all the time in the world.
No one would hear her. One by one
they did as they wished with her,
then, lighting one another’s cigars,
they left. The moon watched
and sank, too shamed to speak.
Next week, the men will take
among themselves a collection,
a pay-day self-tax for future pleasure.
Down at the pink-lit adult arcade
they will purchase another
whose toothless mouth will never
refuse them, whose legs
are always open, whose breasts
remind them
of one another’s younger sisters.
There is a place on her back
where you pump the air in.
With luck she might last
an hour in the parking lot,
before she’s done for,
hissing out her last,
late night’s love-doll,
inflatable woman.
My huge collection, Whippoorwill Road: The Supernatural Poems, contains all my dark and creepy work up through mid-2019. Like Whitman's "Leaves of Grass," I have expanded this work like a huge ball of string. Vampires, Golems, werewolves, mummies and ghouls abound, as well as many dark things inspired by or about H.P. Lovecraft. This is the ultimate poetic story-book for things to read aloud around the campfire, or to frighten young children into hiding under the covers. The 416-page book is now available as a PDF ebook for just $2.99. And remember, every time a copy of this book is purchased, a demon gets his wings.
One of the greatest recordings of the 20th century. Van Cliburn, back from Russia after winning the Tchaikovsky competition, got a ticker tape parade in New York City. This recording, made in Carnegie Hall with a live audience, shows what all the fuss was about. This tall, imposing young Texan rips into Rachmaninoff's Third Concerto, the Mt. Everest of piano concertos.
When I was in third grade, all I wanted was a typewriter. I was given one for Christmas, but it was a toy. You had to rotate a wheel to each letter and then strike a key. It was a cruel joke.