Tag Archives: Eric Robert Nolan

“Where Would We Go?” by Eric Robert Nolan

Where would we go, you and I?
The sea which breathes, in aquamarine,
its rhythmic, salty epic at our ankles
and inundates a foam refrain,
over and over, in rolling green glass:
the tide — the oldest poem — an immutable meter preceding
words, or man, or even ears to hear?

The unvarying sea
takes no notice of poets —
you and I, ourselves inconsonant poems,
varying as all our kind are wont to do …
faithless at the foot of the green, returning tide,
both our lives arrhythmic and
bitter with metaphor.

Where would we go, asalam?
The staid and angled mountains, vaulting up?
Mountains are always odes. The miles of stone
which rise to cut their rival heavens
lance the air, and spin the winds to narrative.
Those winds were singing long before us,
will sing when we are gone.

The mountains will not know our names
even as we whisper one another’s,
or the rise of your breathing where we lay there —
the blithe and meadowed slope that will not blush beneath us,
where we are ribald lyrics, songs out of our lawless senses,
lascivious and nearly wordless.

Where would we go, my muse?
The river that rushes like a fugitive ghost
absconding with its own requiem?
Rivers’ roars are always dirges, for rivers run past
lives beside their banks. Lifetimes
are as seasons to them, always ending.

This timeless river
is unconcerned for poets
and will not slow to note us.
Only our own faces on its hastening, dim and opaque surface.
answer back our gaze. We are elegies, reflected
in heedless, racing waters moving on.

Stay with me, here, for now.
We have two temporary
yet temperate pages all our own
over which is the script of our ardor:
my gray-grizzled Irish cheek and your Iranian skin,
to read and study, see and know, slowly and tenderly, in this ordinary room,
in this little city, in this waning light, in this fleeting moment,
in these fleeting lives.

I am inelegant free verse, but you …
you are my perfect poem.
We will draw the sheets over us,
over our moving euphony,
and frame to evoke one another —
the rounded warmth of your white shoulder,
the cadence of my pulse.
We will hear one another, and speak
in sedulous repetition
the particular rhythm of each of our names,
measured in the meter of tremulous breath.

(c) Eric Robert Nolan 2022



Santorin (GR), Exomytis, Vlychada BeachDietmar Rabich / Wikimedia Commons / “Santorin (GR), Exomytis, Vlychada Beach — 2017 — 2999 (bw)” / CC BY-SA 4.0


I’m telling you it could totally work.

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This sh*t is real.

Another very good friend of mine has come down with Covid. Thankfully, this person is vaccinated and appears to be recovering well at home.

Get vaxxed. Get boosted. You will thank yourself for it later.



Untitled haiku, February 2022

Winter storms. Plague year.
February night. Dull light.
Fading Republic.



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Photo credit: Helgi Halldórsson from Reykjavík, Iceland, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons

I dino why this keeps happening.

I got teased a little for eating scrambled eggs and ketchup yesterday; a couple of friends of mine opined that it was a kids’ meal.

Today I discovered that the chicken tenders I bought are in dinosaur shapes.

If the universe is trying to send me a message here, I’m not sure what it is.

Update: if you melt cheese over them they look like they’re stuck in the La Brea Tar Pits.



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Untitled short poem, January 31, 2022

Through all of this world’s noise,
its augurs
and its clamor
and all of its iniquitous, ugly voices,
your memory is ever
a gentle refrain in my heart.



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Photo credit: Takkk, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons

(I swear I thought they were Tetris at first.)

This is the only response of which I am capable in response to those … Wordle things that people keep posting.



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An “Ozark” Season 4 prediction — Ben there, done that.

l think that I can predict what will help finally bring down “Ozark’s” Wendy Byrde (the priceless Laura Linney).  Then again, I am almost invariably wrong in my predictions for TV shows, so maybe you should take this with a grain of salt.  Either way, various Seasons 3 and 4 SPOILERS after the jump below  …

Continue reading An “Ozark” Season 4 prediction — Ben there, done that.

Lampposts keeping warm.

South Jefferson Street, Roanoke, Virginia.

I could be mistaken, but I believe that the hats and scarves tied to lampposts and benches have been placed there for needy people to take.  I’ve read about this in other parts of the country — I had no idea that people did this in Roanoke.   There are some good, kind souls in my quiet, little city.



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IDEAL BUILDING SUPPLY.

I arrived here in error; I was actually looking for Merely Adequate Building Supply.

Brandon Avenue SW.  (If you’re actually looking for this company, they’re now located elsewhere in the city … I just have a thing about antiquated building signs.)



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