T.L. Morrisey

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

"Dog" by Lawrence Ferlinghetti

 

Dog on balcony, 11 October 2020


The dog trots freely in the street
and sees reality
and the things he sees
are bigger than himself
and the things he sees
are his reality
Drunks in doorways
Moons on trees
The dog trots freely thru the street
and the things he sees
are smaller than himself
Fish on newsprint
Ants in holes
Chickens in Chinatown windows
their heads a block away
The dog trots freely in the street
and the things he smells
smell something like himself
The dog trots freely in the street
past puddles and babies
cats and cigars
poolrooms and policemen
He doesn’t hate cops
He merely has no use for them
and he goes past them
and past the dead cows hung up whole
in front of the San Francisco Meat Market
He would rather eat a tender cow
than a tough policeman
though either might do
And he goes past the Romeo Ravioli Factory
and past Coit’s Tower
and past Congressman Doyle
He’s afraid of Coit’s Tower
but he’s not afraid of Congressman Doyle
although what he hears is very discouraging
very depressing
very absurd
to a sad young dog like himself
to a serious dog like himself
But he has his own free world to live in
His own fleas to eat
He will not be muzzled
Congressman Doyle is just another
fire hydrant
to him
The dog trots freely in the street
and has his own dog’s life to live
and to think about
and to reflect upon
touching and tasting and testing everything
investigating everything
without benefit of perjury
a real realist
with a real tale to tell
and a real tail to tell it with
a real live
              barking
                         democratic dog
engaged in real
                      free enterprise
with something to say
                             about ontology
something to say
                        about reality
                                        and how to see it
                                                               and how to hear it
with his head cocked sideways
                                       at streetcorners
as if he is just about to have
                                       his picture taken
                                                             for Victor Records
                                  listening for
                                                   His Master’s Voice
                      and looking
                                       like a living questionmark
                                                                 into the
                                                              great gramaphone
                                                           of puzzling existence
                 with its wondrous hollow horn
                         which always seems
                     just about to spout forth
                                                      some Victorious answer
                                                              to everything

Sunday, March 29, 2026

"An die Musik", poem by Franz von Schober

 

Franz von Schober


O blessed art, how often in dark hours,
When the savage ring of life tightens round me,

Have you kindled warm love in my heart,
Have transported me to a better world!
Transported to a better world

Often a sigh has escaped from your harp,
A sweet, sacred harmony of yours

Has opened up the heavens to better times for me,
O blessed art, I thank you for that!
O blessed art, I thank you!

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Province of Poetry & Prayer

 

Lane behind Girouard Avenue, 22 October 2009 



there is a listing or taking of priorities

these things as i have noted them here

are taking place have taken

are the true & proper province of poetry & prayer

                                                             —bpNichol

                                                            The Martyrology, Book Three

 

 

                                                Make my dark heavy

                                                Poem light, and

                                                light

 

                                                —John Donne

                                                “The Progresses of the Soule”

 

 

 

 

1.

only love

has moved me

 

2.

this is my long stopover, my

place in the journey /

 

3.

What is the progress

of my soul? The tree of life,

Adam's fall, Isak Dinisen's

"Sorrow Acre"

 

the skyline, clouds on the horizon

 

the strata of years, the smell

of the air on an October morning,

 

the melting snow in March,

the inflection of words


of what is said, places and streets

places and streets

where my family lived

 

the generations are buried here,

like layers of sediment

where water washed silt across the shore,

 

broken pottery, cracked mirrors,

rust and bones, boxes of soil,

places and streets

 

4.

I woke in Dante’s dark forest

distant from when I was young,

 

surrounded even then by shadows,

someone is dragging in the sacrificial bull,

the stag, the lamb, the erosion of truth

 

could a little corruption

do that much damage?

 

it seemed minimal, collateral

damage to the soul, but no one gets off lightly:

we wait for the apocalypse on our acre of dust

 

that is when

I was delivered up 

to grief and regret

 

5.

a long winter moved across this land,

my life

 

            where the trees

                        had been cut down,

 

a northern storm

like an army in retreat

 

fled across a hundred acre field,

fear blows down

 

from the frozen north,

 

snow hardened into dunes

by the blowing wind,

 

            and beneath the frozen earth

 

                        a sheet of ice,

where houses were abandoned

like wooden ships

 

whose crews had fled

and where empty windows

 

stare blankly

at my approach

 

Written: 15 April 2018; retrieved, 04 February 2026

Friday, March 20, 2026

For Poets

 





As things are, and as fundamentally they must always be,
poetry is not a career, but a mug’s game. 
            —T.S. Eliot. The Use of Criticism (1933)


When you get old, and you’ve written poetry for most of your life, you see how inconsequential it has all been, and then the thought occurs, has this been a huge waste of time? Of course it hasn't, it's been your life, it's what helped make you what you are. You understood life through writing and reading poetry, you transformed a vale of tears into a vale of soul making, as Keats suggested. But while some poets write for the love of writing there are very few real poets, even someone who is old and has published or written their poems for many years may be inauthentic, not true to themselves, pretending to be something they aren't. A real poet is hard to find. For the few, poetry is like a religion (as Matthew Arnold said), but Arnold omitted saying that like religion poetry can be full of false hope, there is no grace, no heaven, and you’re on your own. It's a mug's game. If you're a real poet you question everything, you’re not someone who writes a few poems and, without shame or depth, announces that they are a poet. A poet is someone who defines their inner being as being a poet, not someone who takes a few creative writing courses and decides that they are a poet; you must be born a poet or transformed into being a poet by the events of your life; for a real poet, poetry defines your life, it is a presence in your life, it has an importance that is a part of one’s very existence.



Wednesday, March 18, 2026

"Hand In My Pocket" by Alanis Morissette





I'm broke, but I'm happy
I'm poor, but I'm kind
I'm short, but I'm healthy, yeah
I'm high, but I'm grounded
I'm sane, but I'm overwhelmed
I'm lost, but I'm hopeful, baby

And what it all comes down to
Is that everything's gonna be fine, fine, fine
'Cause I've got one hand in my pocket
And the other one is giving a high five

I feel drunk, but I'm sober
I'm young and I'm underpaid
I'm tired, but I'm working, yeah
I care, but I'm restless
I'm here, but I'm really gone
I'm wrong and I'm sorry, baby

And what it all comes down to
Is that everything's gonna be quite alright
'Cause I've got one hand in my pocket
And the other one is flicking a cigarette

And what it all comes down to
Is that I haven't got it all figured out just yet
'Cause I've got one hand in my pocket
And the other one is giving a peace sign

I'm free, but I'm focused
I'm green, but I'm wise
I'm hard, but I'm friendly, baby
I'm sad, but I'm laughing
I'm brave, but I'm chicken shit
I'm sick, but I'm pretty, baby

And what it all boils down to
Is that no one's really got it figured out just yet
Well, I've got one hand in my pocket
And the other one is playing a piano
And what it all comes down to my friends, yeah
Is that everything is just fine, fine, fine
'Cause I've got one hand in my pocket
And the other one is hailing a taxi cab


Monday, March 16, 2026

And then there were two . . .


Taken on 9 March 2026, milder weather has arrived and now we have two rabbits visiting; but the first rabbit wants nothing to do with the second rabbit when it comes to carrots. It's Hammer Time!