Poem of the day

To a Hyacinth in January
by Constance Naden (1858-1889)

Sweet household hyacinth, whose dainty breath
         Steals through my spirit like an April dream!
         Each day I watch another snowy gleam,
That dawns and brightens through thine emerald sheath:
The encircling air, the water from beneath,
         The fireside glow, the pallid noon‐day beam,
         Arise transfigured in thy white raceme,
Safe from the New Year’s wind, whose touch were death.
The bells of Spring are not so sweet and fair,
         For they with wind and rain and hail must cope,
                  That all too soon their tender life destroy;
But thou, warm sheltered from the frosty air,
         Art like some delicate and hidden hope,
                  More full and fragrant than the promised joy.

Views: 35

Game of the week

Views: 35

How to avoid disaster in the midterms

“The trick, says Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey, will be lowering the expectations of an impatient Democratic base that is eager to press the party’s slim advantage by forcing votes on issues like Medicare for All or by making structural changes that could secure the party’s power. Booker says there aren’t enough votes to pass statehood for Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico right now, nor for expanding the Supreme Court. He’s taking his own lesson from the early Obama years.”

History suggests that Joe Biden and the Democrats are going to have a tough two years and a disaster in the midterms. Here?s their plan to avoid that.

Views: 59

Poem of the day

“In the days of old”
by Thomas Love Peacock (1785-1866)

In the days of old,
Lovers felt true passion,
Deeming years of sorrow
By a smile repaid.
Now the charms of gold,
Spells of pride and fashion,
Bid them say good morrow
To the best-loved maid.

Through the forests wild,
O’er the mountains lonely,
There were never weary
Honour to pursue:
If the damsel smiled
Once in seven years only,
All their wanderings dreary
Ample guerdon knew.

Now one day’s caprice
Weighs down years of smiling,
Youthful hearts are rovers,
Love is bought and sold:
Fortune’s gifts may cease,
Love is less beguiling;
Wiser were the lovers,
In the days of old

Views: 35

It’s not stimulus, it’s relief

Paul Krugman in the NYT: “While coronavirus relief legislation is often called ‘stimulus,’ that’s not what Biden is trying to do. The economy in 2021 isn’t like the economy in 2009, depressed because there isn’t enough demand; we haven’t fully recovered because we’re still on partial lockdown, with some activities curtailed by the risk of infection.

“The goal of policy in this situation isn’t to pump up spending, getting people to eat out and travel. It is, instead, to help people, businesses and local governments get through the difficult period until widespread vaccination lets us go back to business as usual.

“And we know, as certainly as we know anything in economics, that the economy will be depressed at least into the summer and probably beyond. The last package didn’t provide remotely enough aid to get us through those months. Asking whether that package boosted the economy therefore completely misses the point; it’s obvious that America needs another round of disaster relief.”

Views: 40

Poem of the day

Fragment written on the back of the manuscript to Don Juan
by Lord Byron (1788-1824)

I would to Heaven that I were so much clay,
⁠         As I am blood, bone, marrow, passion, feeling—
Because at least the past were passed away,
⁠         And for the future—(but I write this reeling,
Having got drunk exceedingly to-day,
⁠         So that I seem to stand upon the ceiling)
I say—the future is a serious matter—
And so—for God’s sake—hock and soda-water!

Views: 32

Poem of the day

Consumption
by William Cullen Bryant (1794-1878)

Ay, thou art for the grave; thy glances shine
Too brightly to shine long; another Spring
Shall deck her for men’s eyes—but not for thine—
Sealed in a sleep which knows no wakening.
The fields for thee have no medicinal leaf,
And the vexed ore no mineral of power;
And they who love thee wait in anxious grief
Till the slow plague shall bring the final hour.
Glide softly to thy rest then; Death should come
Gently, to one of gentle mould like thee,
As light winds wandering through groves of bloom
Detach the delicate blossom from the tree.
Close thy sweet eyes, calmly, and without pain;
And we will trust in God to see thee yet again.

Views: 47

Poem of the day

Paa Memphis Station
by Johannes Jensen (1873-1950)

Halvt vaagen og halvt blundende
slået af en klam Virkelighed, men endnu borte
i en indre Gus af danaidiske Drømme
staar jeg og hakker Tænder
paa Memphis Station, Tennessee.
Det regner.

Natten er saa øde og udslukt
og Regnen hudfletter Jorden
med en vidløs, dunkel Energi.
Alting er klægt og uigennemtrængeligt.

Hvorfor holder Toget her Time efter Time?
Hvorfor er min Skæbne gaaet i staa her?
Skal jeg flygte fra Regnen og Aandsfortærelsen
i Danmark, Indien og Japan
for at regne inde og raadne i Memphis,
Tennessee, U.S.A.?

Og nu dages det. Lyset siver glædesløst
ind over dette vaade Fængsel.
Dagen blotter ubarmhjertigt
de kolde Skinner og al den sorte Søle
Ventesalen med Chokoladeautomat,
Appelsinskaller, Cigar- og Tændstikstumper
Dagen griner igennem med spyende Tagrender
og et evigt Gitter af Regn,
Regn, siger jeg fra Himmel og til Jord.

Hvor Verden er døv og uflyttelig,
hvor Skaberen er talentløs!
Og hvorfor bliver jeg ved at betale mit Kontingent
til denne plebejiske Kneippkur af en Tilværelse!

Stille! Se hvor Maskinen,
den vældige Tingest, staar rolig og syder
og hyller sig i Røg, den er taalmodig.
Tænd piben paa fastende liv,
forband Gud og svælg din Smærte!

Gaa så dog hen og bliv i Memphis!
Dit liv er jo alligevel ikke andet
end et surt Regnvejr, og din Skæbne
var altid at hænge forsinket
i en eller anden miserabel Ventesal –
Bliv i Memphis, Tennessee!

For inde i et af disse plakathujende Huse
venter Lykken dig, Lykken,
hvis du blot kan æde din Utaalmodighed –
også her sover en rund ung Jomfru
med Øret begravet i sit Haar,
hun vil komme dig i møde
en fin dag på Gaden
som en bølge af Vellugt
med en Mine som om hun kendte dig.

Er det ikke Foraar?
Falder Regnen ikke frodigt?
Lyder den ikke som en forelsket Mumlen,
en lang dæmpet Kærlighedspassiar
Mund mod Mund
mellem Regnen og Jorden?
Dagen gryede saa sorgfuldt,
men se nu lyser Regnfaldet!
Under du ikke Dagen dens Kampret?
Det er dog nu lyst. Og der slaar Muldlugt
ind mellem Perronens rustne Jærnstivere
blandet med Regnstøvets ramme Aande –
en Foraarsanelse –
er det ikke trøstigt?

Og se nu, se hvor Mississipi
i sin seng af oversvømmede Skove
vaagner mod Dagen!
Se hvor Kæmpefloden nyder sin Bugtning!
Hvor den flommer kongeligt i Bue og svinger Flaader
af Træer og laset Drivtømmer i sine Hvirvler!
Se hvor den fører en uhyre Hjuldamper
i sin Syndflodsfavn
som en Danser, der er herre paa Gulvet!
Se de sunkne Næs – Oh hvilken urmægtig Ro
over Landskabet af druknede Skove!
Ser du ikke, hvor Strømmens Morgenvande
klæder sig milebredt med Dagens tarvelige Lys
og vandrer rundt under de svangre Skyer!

Fat dig også du, Uforsonlige!
Vil du aldrig glemme, at man lovede dig Evigheden?
Forholder du Jorden din arme Taknemlighed?
Hvad vil du da med dit Elskerhjærte?

Fat dig og bliv i Memphis,
Meld dig som Borger paa Torvet,
gaa ind og livsassurer dig imellem de andre,
betal din Præmie af Lumpenhed,
at de kan vide sig sikre for dig,
og du ikke skal blive hældt ud af Foreningen.
Gør kur til hin Jomfru med Roser og Guldring
og start et Savskæreri som andre Mennesker.
Hank rolig op i Gummistøvlerne …
Se dig ud, smøg din vise Pibe
i sphinxforladte Memphis …

Ah, der kommer det elendige Godstog,
som vi har ventet paa i seks Timer.
Det kommer langsomt ind – med knuste Sider,
det pifter svagt, Vognene lammer paa tre Hjul,
og de sprængte Ruf drypper af Jord og Slam.
Men paa Tenderen mellem Kullene
ligger fire Skikkelser
dækket af blodvaade Frakker.

Da pruster vor store Ekspresmaskine,
gaar lidt frem og standser dybt sukkende
og staar færdig til Spring. Sporet er frit.

Og vi rejser videre
gennem de oversvømmede Skove
under regnens gabende Sluser.

Views: 41

Poem of the day

A Dream Within a Dream
by Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849)

Take this kiss upon the brow!
And, in parting from you now,
Thus much let me avow—
You are not wrong, who deem
That my days have been a dream;
Yet if hope has flown away
In a night, or in a day,
In a vision, or in none,
Is it therefore the less gone?
All that we see or seem
Is but a dream within a dream.

I stand amid the roar
Of a surf-tormented shore,
And I hold within my hand
Grains of the golden sand—
How few! yet how they creep
Through my fingers to the deep,
While I weep—while I weep!
O God! can I not grasp
Them with a tighter clasp?
O God! can I not save
One from the pitiless wave?
Is all that we see or seem
But a dream within a dream?

Views: 30

Poem of the day

A Kiss
by Austin Dobson (1840-1921)

Rose kissed me today.
      Will she kiss me tomorrow?
Let it be as it may,
Rose kissed me today.
But the pleasure gives way
      To a savor of sorrow—
Rose kissed me today—
      Will she kiss me tomorrow?

Views: 36