Feliz dia de sant jordi (April 23)

Thank you, Catalan culture for my favorite holiday: el dia de Sant Jordi. On this day all over Cataluña, there is an exchange: men give women a rose, and women give men a book. It’s like Valentine’s day, without the chalky candy and cupids. On this day in Barcelona, on there are stands upon stands filling the streets, selling books and roses. I was introduced to this holiday four years ago in an Introduction to Catalan class and have been celebrating it ever since, twice in Barcelona where the joy of so many BOOKS and the beauty of so many ROSES is miraculous, despite my awareness that all the books are in a language I could only decipher with a dictionary.

Good Poem (not mine).

I sent this to a friend but then read it again and felt that it isn’t enough to share it with just one person. (I must miss New York.)


Kissing Stieglitz Good-Bye
by Gerald Stern

Every city in America is approached
through a work of art, usually a bridge
but sometimes a road that curves underneath
or drops down from the sky. Pittsburgh has a tunnel—

you don’t know it—that takes you through the rivers
and under the burning hills. I went there to cry
in the woods or carry my heavy bicycle
through fire and flood. Some have little parks—

San Francisco has a park. Albuquerque
is beautiful from a distance; it is purple
at five in the evening. New York is Egyptian,
especially from the little rise on the hill

at 14-C; it has twelve entrances
like the body of Jesus, and Easton, where I lived,
has two small floating bridges in front of it
that brought me in and out. I said good-bye

to them both when I was 57. I’m reading
Joseph Wood Krutch again—the second time.
I love how he lived in the desert. I’m looking at the skull
of Georgia O’Keeffe. I’m kissing Stieglitz good-bye.

He was a city, Stieglitz was truly a city
in every sense of the word; he wore a library
across his chest; he had a church on his knees.
I’m kissing him good-bye; he was, for me,

the last true city; after him there were
only overpasses and shopping centers,
little enclaves here and there, a skyscraper
with nothing near it, maybe a meaningless turf

where whores couldn’t even walk, where nobody sits,
where nobody either lies or runs; either that
or some pure desert: a lizard under a boojum,
a flower sucking the water out of a rock.

What is the life of sadness worth, the bookstores
lost, the drugstores buried, a man with a stick
turning the bricks up, numbering the shards,
dream twenty-one, dream twenty-two. I left

with a glass of tears, a little artistic vial.
I put it in my leather pockets next
to my flask of Scotch, my golden knife and my keys,
my joyful poems and my T-shirts. Stieglitz is there

beside his famous number; there is smoke
and fire above his head; some bowlegged painter
is whispering in his ear; some lady-in-waiting
is taking down his words. I’m kissing Stieglitz

goodbye, my arms are wrapped around him, his photos
are making me cry; we’re walking down Fifth Avenue;
we’re looking for a pencil; there is a girl
standing against the wall—I’m shaking now

when I think of her; there are two buildings, one
is in blackness, there is a dying poplar;
there is a light on the meadow; there is a man
on a sagging porch. I would have believed in everything.

Poem.

Katie

She loves three things:
moving a stamp from adhesive
to envelope, luggage
with a loud silver clasp,
and an old jar as goblet. She hates
to think of her mother
in her separate bed;
she hates the phrase yes-or-no
and the pert requirements
of morning.

And I live without her.

For those in New York (fragment)

Now you walk through New York frigid in your layers
Flumes of farsighted taxis tunnel by alongside you
The agony of love tightens in your neck
As if you would never see those loved again
As if you were living in another nation where the gestures are unfamiliar
You are unsure of your consonants & use them delicately
You unfurl your tongue in slowmotion as you whistle
The threads of your throat coat
Three slips of wind
It is a song on its way to lovely
And it will be neither taken nor given away freely

Poem: “Brainstorm”

How about—how about a thumb
bracelet. How about socks
that have Velcro on them
and the Velcro has soles.

How about a sandwich
made of something different.
Made of that webbing—
that webbing they use for belts.

You could put snaps on a roller skate.
I never thought of that one.

(This poem’s called “Brainstorm,” but it’s no storm from my brain; it’s made of sentences a sweet homeless guy was saying to himself near me as I sat outside of Peet’s Coffee & Tea last Sunday. He was just sitting there, thinking out loud. Coming up with new combinations. Classic brainstorming. I was in love. So I put him in stanzas.)

Minor Event; Major Validation

Last Wednesday I received a letter addressed to me in my own handwriting. This never fails to utterly disturb and confuse me for three seconds, until I remember that it must be from a journal that required a SASE (Self Addressed Stamped Envelope) in order to deliver me a rejection letter. But–MIRACLE OF MIRACLES–this one was not a rejection. The Connecticut River Review wants to publish my poem “It Hurts Your Eyes (To Look)” and this bit of unfathomable good luck will be appropriately celebrated as soon as I finish my literary theory paper and Spring Break 2010 officially begins.

(I’d post the poem here, but then I might get in trouble because maybe it’d count as being previously published, and that’s not allowed, and oh the rules of the internet are very confusing when it comes to issues such as these. So I guess if you really want to see the poem, you’ll just have to email me [taylormkatz@gmail.com] and go, Taylor Frickin’ Katz. Congratulations and gimme gimme. And I’ll happily give it give it.)

it was a birthday

People of my life, your presents are poetry. Thank you for

  • a watermelon
  • a note where you said something holy in the middle of other beautiful things about our friendship
  • a note where you wrote like you were in the middle of the oregon trail
  • a blog post in my honor
  • a volume of collected camus
  • that bottle of champagne, and that one too!
  • a bag of coffee beans
  • a something that looked like a cigarette but didn’t have tobacco in it
  • a kerchief you embroidered with words i should carry around
  • my dream sunglasses in a handmade case
  • a chocolate cake brought to me while i was tutoring
  • whimsical matchbooks
  • a book on edible plants (with pictures!)
  • musics & musics & musics on compact disc
  • “the enourmous room” by ee cummings
  • a feather hairclip
  • a funfetti cake with funfetti icing and lettered candles
  • a birthday card made with magic markers
  • four fancy chocolates
  • a bouquet of red & yellow flowers
  • two scientific pictures of succulents on nice paper
  • a gold bicycle bell and a mended tire
  • a green leather journal
  • photographs of places we’ve walked together
  • three cadbury creme eggs
  • a collaborative card with a drawing of two different types of birds (one that eats my cake and one that reminds me i am old)
  • three dozen kumquats in a taco bell bag
  • purple jewelry
  • a poem you wrote for me while driving & a picture of many species of cats that a friend gave you when she left you
  • a record by the band
  • two notebooks the shape of the poems i write
  • herbs de provence in bulk
  • paisley stationery with many purples
  • a birthday song &

your presences your presences your presences…!

i am rich with them, in them.

Useless but Excellent Information

but how to collect a human?

Collective nouns.

(Yes, these are real. My favorites are bolded.)

  • A shrewdness of apes.
  • A flange of baboons.
  • A cete of badgers.
  • A parcel of birds. A pod of birds (small flock). A volary of birds (in an aviary).
  • A dissimulation of birds.
  • An obstinancy of buffalo.
  • A rabble of butterflies.
  • A clowder of cats. A clutter. A comfort. A chowder.
  • A coalition of cheetahs.
  • A quiver of cobras.
  • A muster of crows. A hover. A parcel. A murder. A horde. A parliament.
  • A pitying of turtle doves.
  • A seething of eels.
  • A charm of finches.
  • A stand of flamingoes. A flamboyance of flamingoes.
  • A skulk of foxes.
  • A kindergarten of giraffes. A journey. A kaleidoscope.
  • A troubling of goldfish.
  • A remuda of horses.
  • A cackle of hyenas.
  • A husk of jackrabbits.
  • A brood, smuck, or smack of jellyfish.
  • A troop of kangaroos.
  • A kendle of kittens.
  • A loveliness of ladybirds.
  • A leap of leopards.
  • A steam of minnows.
  • A business of mongooses.
  • A pandemonium of parrots.
  • A covey of partridges.

The Love Show

Tomorrow night (Sunday, February 14th, 2010, the day of love & poetry) the good man Jared A Muscat will be out of town and therefore I will be hosting his 5pm radio show. You should listen, please. Highlights may or may not include:

  • Love poems
  • A call-in quiz
  • Live music
  • Freestyling
  • High caliber poet-people, doing their thang, LIVE on the RADIO

So grab your sweet tea/ sweetie and listen in, because poetry’s alive and thumping in sunny San Diego…

5pm for Californians

8pm for my east coast people

http://ksdt.ucsd.edu/