
Friday, December 17, 2010
Come Live With Me and Be My Love.. poem by Marlowe

Thursday, December 16, 2010
Ode To A Large Tuna In The Market by Pablo Neruda

Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Friday, November 5, 2010
Fleurs du Mal, Baudelaire

Sonnet d'automne
Ils me disent, tes yeux, clairs comme le cristal:
«Pour toi, bizarre amant, quel est donc mon mérite?»
— Sois charmante et tais-toi! Mon coeur, que tout irrite,
Excepté la candeur de l'antique animal,
Ne veut pas te montrer son secret infernal,
Berceuse dont la main aux longs sommeils m'invite,
Ni sa noire légende avec la flamme écrite.
Je hais la passion et l'esprit me fait mal!
Aimons-nous doucement. L'Amour dans sa guérite,
Ténébreux, embusqué, bande son arc fatal.
Je connais les engins de son vieil arsenal:
Crime, horreur et folie! — Ô pâle marguerite!
Comme moi n'es-tu pas un soleil automnal,
Ô ma si blanche, ô ma si froide Marguerite?
— Charles Baudelaire
Autumn Sonnet
They say to me, your eyes, clear as crystal:
"For you, bizarre lover, what is my merit then?"
— Be charming and be still! My heart, which all things irk,
Except the candor of the animals of old,
Does not wish to reveal its black secret to you,
Whose lulling hands invite me to long sleep,
Nor its somber legend written with flame.
I hate passion; intelligence makes me suffer!
Let us love each other sweetly. Tenebrous Love,
Ambushed in his shelter, stretches his fatal bow.
I know all the weapons of his old arsenal:
Crime, horror, and madness! — pale marguerite!
Are you not, like me, an autumnal sun,
O my Marguerite, so white and so cold?
— William Aggeler, The Flowers of Evil (Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild, 1954)
Thursday, November 4, 2010
In The Wave Strike Over Unquiet Stones by Pablo Neruda

In the wave-strike over unquiet stones
the brightness bursts and bears the rose
and the ring of water contracts to a cluster
to one drop of azure brine that falls.
O magnolia radiance breaking in spume,
magnetic voyager whose death flowers
and returns, eternal, to being and nothingness:
shattered brine, dazzling leap of the ocean.
Merged, you and I, my love, seal the silence
while the sea destroys its continual forms,
collapses its turrets of wildness and whiteness,
because in the weft of those unseen garments
of headlong water, and perpetual sand,
we bear the sole, relentless tenderness.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Monday, October 25, 2010
Leda and The Swan by William Butler Yeats

Friday, September 24, 2010
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Itzhak Perlman plays Klezmer
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
The Peacock by William Butler Yeats
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Metamorphosis by Kafka





















