Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Sunday, May 10, 2020


Two pieces from the Sunday New York Times caught my attention this morning.  The first piece is on pages 30 and 31 of the newspaper.  The opening paragraph reads, “After three years in office, the Trump administration has dismantled most of the major the president promised to undo.”  It goes on across two full pages listing: All 98 Environmental Rules the Trump Administration is Revoking or Rolling Back. 

The second piece from the Magazine, is this week’s poem selected by Naomi Shihab Nye.  The poem printed out below is one by Ellery Akers, from her recently published book Swerve….  
Each piece stands alone, but together.  The matter of fact writing in the first, are made to taste bad and smell bad by the poetry of the second.

At Any Moment, There Could Be a Swerve in a Different Direction

There was a moment 
when shooting egrets for feathers became wrong.
There was a moment
when the Wilderness Act
changed the lives of billions of blades of grass.

I remember the moment when a river that used to catch fire
turned from flammable to swimmable.

A swerve smells astringent, like the wind off the sea;
it tastes red, the way Red Hot cinnamon mints
burn in your mouth;
it’s heavy, the way the weight of letters is heavy,
arriving in sacks at the Senate;
it sounds like the click of needles
as hundreds of thousands of women knit pink hats;
it looks like a coyote, crossing the freeway to go home.

Stick a fork in it, its done.   Another picture from the University Street Fair (May 21)