



Anne Waldman's SANCTUARY (Spuyten Duyvil, spuytenduyvil.net) is a mind bending book of poems with wonderful collages by T Thilleman. Anne Waldman is an renowned poet and founding member of the "Outsider" experimental poetry community. She has read in the streets, as well as Casa Del Lago in Mexico City, the Dodge Lit Festival in the U.S.A., the Jaipur Lit Festival in India and teaches poetics all over the world. Waldman is an original "Open Field Investigator" of Consciousness. Among her many books are "Fast Speaking Woman" (City Lights), the P.E.N. Award-winning, Lovis Trilogy "Colors in the Mechanism of Concealment", and her 2018 "Trickster Feminism" (Penguin). An excerpt from a poem in SANCTUARY below. Her calligraphic design, important to the text of the complete poem, couldn't be reproduced in this blog. I think you get a sense of her dynamic words. More at annewaldman.org.

















Light Coda Occludes





w ell, it’s very frightening. here last weekend raids in harlem and brooklyn. i am reading exact parallels in my studies of german theology circa 1932. very very scary. my church people had an intense meeting last week deciding to be in the radar of ICE with sanctuary status. They have no illusions-- are already aware that the nation-wide changes to driver’s licenses due Oct 2020 = voter suppression. And still hoping for reparations. Paul Tillich has an excellent stance re: the Courage to Be, In Spite Of... love, Lisa





Forty guards with clubs went on a rampage and brutalized thirty-tree jailed suffragists. This was at Occoquan Workhouse. Orders of W.H. Whittaker. Lucy Burns was beaten and then they chained her hands to cell bars above her head. She was left there a night. Dora Lewis was hurled into a dark cell, her head smashed against the iron bed, she was out cold. Dora! Alice Cosu her roommate thought she was dead and suffered a heart attack. The affidavits reported women were grabbed choked slammed pinched beaten kicked and twisted





Occludes……………………………………………o ruse, o blues, abuse, subterfuge, o rues, intrudes,

This “not-seeing” in the midst of seeing, this not seeing that is the condition of seeing, became the visual norm that has been a national norm, one conducted by the photographic frame in the scene of torture. (Judith Butler)

what is our constellation? field of truths? camera &; invasion positioning &; valence &; question &; target each such time, such as, such as it is, such as it was, and be that as it is, and head and aching head and my arcing headlong as it is in suchness rush to meet lights and other resilient head, soldier, shudders back, saved this time. head of armistice reckoning head — pubic metabolism





rocks the world its sweet and vile pain (someone dies) cerulean sky scars hinges loops stress marks thickets cracks green of meadow below shifts blue unsettled green blue no longer hope cloud as if scattered across a gambling table permitted there? behind the masks? money? Gaza. A fence? living way below the poverty line. gazillions...

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The Snow Dead by Marc Zegans, published by Cervena Barva Press, http://www.thelostbookshelf.com/poetrychapbook





Mark Zegans considers himself a student and admirer of Anne Waldman. He is the author of five previous collections of poems, The Underwater Typewriter , Boys in the Woods , Pillow Talk , The Book of Clouds , and La Commedia Sotterranea: Swizzle Felt's First Folio form the Typewriter Underground ; two spoken word albums Night Work , and Marker and Parker , and immersive theatrical productions Mum and Shaw , and The Typewriter Underground . The Snow Dead debuted theatrically in Erotic Eclectic's "Sin-aesthetic" at the Lost Church during San Francisco's 2019 Lit Crawl. His poetry can be found at marczegans.com.





The short paragraphs of The Snow Dead form an inquisitive meditation on life and death. The anonymous narrator is, like Waldman, an "open field investigator" deciphering enigmatic marks in cold snow. I found T he Snow Dead akin to Dylan Thomas' Under Milk Wood, where different stories and voices are linked by life in a Welsh fishing town. Zegans' marks in the snow indicate lives frozen, glacier-like, in time. The narrator details what he sees and conjectures, aware how little is left when "all is said and done." An exerpt below.





Lisa





We peer into history, as we stareBelow the root line. Looking upIs more complex, a tracing of pastAnd a hurtling expansionBut in the ice all is dead, purifiedCrystalline, and yet blue like life.The offerings are left on the surfaceTestamentary evidence of the killing.The bodies in ice were never offeredMerely preserved, accidents in waiting.On the surface, there is no recovery.The snow dead decay more slowlyThe flies do not swarm. We watch.At distance, they appear as black marksThe work of a spare calligrapherWho enlivens the field by its small rupture.Gradient enters as we approachFirst tone, then hue, then textureFinally wetness. We see the slicked bloodThe glistening hair by the wound.The seeping of fluids draws raptors.A fox lies on fresh snow.Its neck broke, slight steamExiting its once clever mouth.Before I knew how to make snow angelsThere was the corpse on the bowed lawnArms thrown wide, palms up, fingers spreadShoed toes pointed toward the sidewalk.When the first snow cameThe uncut grass poked upLeaving small circlesAround stiffened stemsTaking season as aberration.“The souls speak louderIn the graveyardUnder winter snow,”She said, leavingFootprints amongstThe headstones.I can’t tell you anything.I missed the opportunity.My bones tell no tales.The snow heaves overMy recent-filled grave.In spring it will sinkWe take the frozen rictusAs a grin, as if there wasA secret, zygomatic jokeLess than cosmic, merelyPrivate, as if, in the lifeCut short at the momentOf death, wry truth is given.It is a lie we tell ourselves.She was a pin-up modelIn World War II, knownTo millions in glossiesThen forgotten, neglectedLiving still into her 80sAlone in a weathered houseAbove Route 2, attic filledWith curling stills, dried inkAnd bushels of love lettersThe smell of dark wool tweedOver dark wool suitsBlack shoes not meant for snowLeather gloves that will pinchAnd stain when touched by salt.I would walk though the woodsScavenging fallen branches,The leaf stripped deadwood,Cut it, stack it and leave it to dry.I could tell by feel how long itHad rested in the snow, and why.“Don’t be fooled,” he said“Many of the snow deadHave life in them yet.Some are simply restingOthers hiding in winterMost don’t knowWarmth a memory lost.”Streetlights and silence in this coldPlace lit by candles, convenience storeChocolate donuts and well-aged wineOur only food, as we sit on the floorStaring out at the snow-cleaned street.It’s four AM. We are the only two peopleAlive. You have no power, nor IBut there is electricity between us.S.W.