#PocketPoems: NYPL's Celebration of National Poetry Month

By Gwen Glazer, Librarian
April 1, 2019

To celebrate National Poetry Month, The New York Public Library has collected poetry from over 30 contemporary poets and staff members, with some writing especially for this project. Throughout the month, the poems will be shared online, across the Library’s social media channels, and in our branches—and presented below!

pocketpoems

Download all of this year's #PocketPoems.

April 30: untitled by Raúl Hernández

Escribes un hayku

en una hoja de cuaderno.

Arrancas la hoja

la doblas y la doblas.

Por la ventana 

se va el hayku

      a las estrellas

hecho avioncito.

….

You write a haiku 

on a sheet from a notebook.

You tear it out

and fold it and fold it.

Out the window

the haiku heads

        for the stars

made into a little airplane.

Check out Raúl Hernández's work in the Library and online.

April 29: 'NO GHOST THO'' by Katy Chrisler

Pull a black pyramid

from your mouth. Spit-glistened

affair of sphere swallow

not merely a theory of beauty.

Province knows the boundary

of what is fearful. The object

called forth, more to say.

Lead back to something.

Belong here with me among

the smallest of means.

Check out Katy Chrisler's work online.

April 28: 'Monday, May 15, Sappho, WA—' by Sarah Dowling

a logging chapter is closed. Those

country maidens were good riders,

flowers blooming in an old bathtub,

cows grazing in an orchard. Their

garments neat as they should be. A

-cross the dirt road, peasant-girls

on the front porch—oh, 

anyone would want to live

in the fenced area nearby. Anyone

would want a dress around her feet.

Check out Sarah Dowling's work in the Libraryonline, and on Twitter.

April 27: 'Shipwrecked' by Grace Yamada

I feel no wonder

Looking down on my ship run aground

Decks and helm deserted

By the rage that filled the sails and rowed the oars

I can only wander along this salt coast

Collecting and discarding the memories I will need

As I continue on without them

Check out Grace Yamada's work at the Library.

April 26: untiltled by Adrienne Raphel

Higgledy piggledy, 

Ernest H. Shackleton 

Couldn’t man up for the Polar Bear Swim. 

No bears in the South Pole, he 

Geo-pedantically 

Whined but he knew he was 

Being a wimp.

Check out Adrienne Raphel's work in the Libraryonline, and on Twitter.

April 25: 'You' by Katrina Ruiz

are rogue balloon caught in revolving ceiling fan

speeding car in the emergency lane

the dog who wanders too far without a leash.

I try to ground you like chancletas do beach blankets

and hand holds on rollercoasters.

But we’re the prizes discarded in the cereal box

socks lost in every wash

and the farmer’s market haul

we swear we’ll eat before it goes bad.  

April 24: 'Beginning with a Horse' by Alan Felsenthal

A horse has six legs

two belong to a man

who might be Pluto

disguised as the devil

abducting a unicorn

whose horn was used

to purify a spring

that whetted the infinite

now behind us

Check out Alan Felsenthal's work in the Libraryonline, and on Twitter.

April 23: 'Molecule' by Cole Heinowitz

Each molecule of water, bound by a limelit orgy in the elevator before internship to some cubic unit of sea reef requiting birth, causes an eddy of causality where sedimented rings appear as vertical chutes in the heat of the moment, leading straight from surface to core, obfuscating the sweatshop of historical accretions madly revolving to support the spectacle drinking from a cup, seeing “no manner of similitude.”

Check out Cole Heinowitz's work online.

April 22: 'Parable of Joan Mitchell' by Daniel Poppick

Blue jail, teal jail, green jail, ochre jail, aqua jail, yellow jail, mustard jail, red jail, rose jail, magenta jail, platinum jail, charcoal jail, chartreuse jail, puce jail, pink jail, lilac jail, sunset jail, sail jail, soil jail, salmon jail, noise jail, blood clot jail, stair jail, rust jail, custard jail, snail shell jail, drip jail, grass jail, rhyme jail, dice jail, worm jail, circle jail, dot jail, clear jail, chrome jail, mail jail, air jail.

Check out Daniel Poppick's work online .

April 21: 'What Parks Are For' by John Burns

In a field, two Labrador retrievers

roll together, tongues out.

under an orange sky.

What have I lost that I cannot remember?

I think it is the color of that sky

and what the two dogs were trying to say with their eyes.

I bark like a cloud.

April 20: 'I Give You My Heart' by Ricardo Alberto Maldonado

I find myself on my feet with fifteen leaves. Everything carries 

its own light on the walls.  

I woke up to slaughter—my heart opening to cemeteries of moon, 

to parasites, to drizzle, the mud crowning the undergrowth 

with immense sadness. I knew death when I dressed in my uniform. 

I found the index of solitude: my country in legal 

jargon, its piety, its fiction— Yes. It loves me, really. 

I give my blood as the blood of all fish.  

Check out Ricardo Alberto Maldonado's work online and on Twitter.

April 19: 'Unconditional' by Dora Malech

If this black willow is calligraphy

then this white sky’s an invitation

and requests the honor of your presence. 

And you—will you attend?

Check out Dora Malech's work in the Libraryonline, and on Twitter.

April 18: 'Kintsugi' by Sally Wen Mao

Gold in the cracks. Thank god the vessel was broken. Why did I believe that repair would never mend it back to its beauty? Over the years, mending has become a monotony. Never mind the slow burn of a porcelain birth—kiln of a million live embers. Repair this ewer with precious metals, let its fractures show. Soak the shattered thing overnight in whole milk. Morning, wait for its whole.

Apply adhesive—

pinch of gold, silver of ash.

She was broken, thank 

god.

April 18: 'When I say I’m Spanish, I mean' by Alysia Vargas

Yo soy Puertorriqueña through blood. 

Culture runs through my body, stops 

at my mind and my tongue speaks the language 

foreign to my ancestors. Native tongue pronounces 

a mixture of failure and American. I rarely speak 

Spanish but I feel it in my mothers 

hands when she tames my curls. When I walk

into her sofrito scented kitchen and open arms. 

Saint candles burning the day away, my ancestors 

humming in my blood.   

April 18: 'Language' by Carla Faesler

Nobody

will believe

I reached so far

on this old vehicle

​of thought

April 18: from 'The Goodbyes' by Emily Sieu Liebowitz

​Can I become closer to a portrait in my nature? 

Less like something overheard in town, 

but still a way to refer to oneself. Not 

me or you, we or they but more 

like Sylvia’s dogwood is blooming & 

Susie’s are in blossom too.

April 18:  [Every bare tree] by Robin Myers

​Every bare tree

is a silent

chorus of itself.

April 18: 'world around the' by Caleb Klaces

The eye does not see itself as a place to live.

The cruise ship parties on a bellyful of jellyfish.

Painted stars hold the cracked ceiling together.

Light falls and the sea is supportive.

My debt shoves me aside and grins at the camera.

When a number forgets where it started, it speculates.

Coins multiply in the frozen hearts of Bluefin tuna.

This old coin cannot bear its own head.

April 18: 'Plea' by Caitlin Roach

How when a body dies it becomes the body. No mind

to all the mouths who named it, who knew it in quiet, who call for it

now, unanswered. But know it: bear the cells’ leaking out and pooling

where they’re pulled to, bluebottles lapping at these final outputs, fur

around their mouths bloodied like winged wolves. Note them

as markers, makers beyond you. Watch the body age beyond itself, wage

against itself, overwintered. Count the cracks of cygnets hatching

in June. Let the prayer come out your mouth, just let it. The light

will regain its blueness, I know it.

* originally published in The Manchester Review

Check out Caitlin Roach's work in the Library and online.

 

April 17: 'Mango Mañanas' by María José Maldonado

I reached up and picked a

mango from my

grandmother’s tree

She cut it into slices added

lime, salt and alguashte

That day we ate our native fruit under the tropical

Salvadoran sun while a green little lizard looked up at

our delicious fun.

Check out María José Maldonado's work in the Library.

April 16: 'Violin' by Ian Brand

A violin filling with blue dusk

or else your voice  

is a grotto inside a waterfall, 

a house with four walls of rain 

outside of which the birds  

are patches of song

scissored

piecemeal 

from the light. 

Check out Ian Brand's work in the Library and online.

April 15: '4ever 2morrow' by Mario Santana

I live in a world of my own

There's no place like home

Somewhere that makes you

Want to write a poem

Just imagine a nation

Where you can use your imagination

As a passport to the future

Using creation to get away like vacation

April 14: 'Oda a Pura Belpré' by María Isabel Molestina Triviño

Ay dulce Pura, tu nombre lo dice todo Siempre íntegra cual

alma cálida en un mes de verano Tus dotes de contar y

cantar se hacen palpables por doquier Con voz suave y sutil

Ay dulce Pura, tú que derrochas paz por donde quiera que vas

Brindando alegría a chicos y grandes Con tus cuentos de

antaño Y tu folklore colosal

Ay dulce Pura, a pesar de no estar mas aquí Tu espíritu brilla

con luz sinigual Y tu legado continúa muy presente Tocando a

toda la gente con tus espléndidos cuentos de siempre

Check out María Isabel Molestina Triviño's work on Instagram.

 

April 13: 'firefighter' by Al Valentín

I come from a long line of women who believed

that it's better to be on fire than to be a fool

so I'm teaching myself to cry again

hoping that these embers will be extinguished

hoping that at least one of us

can know the joy of water

 

April 12: 'Helia' by Rhonda Evans

She eases us her brilliance upon us.

Slow. Careful. 

Waking us with gentle hues that rock the soul like grandma’s hands.

The brilliance of mid-day is a steady pulse.

She is proud of herself at the end of the day.

To rest she cloaks herself in the color of Queens.

First lilac. Then lavender. Then she drinks the wine of sleep.

Check out Rhonda Evans' work at NYPL and on Twitter.

 

April 11: 'Boys Accidentally Set Sail While Painting Yacht' by Jared Hayley

A logbook of dirty Mad Libs.

Hooks without bait. Shucked skin.

They vow never to speak of what happens,

then nothing worth telling happens.

The moment of day when sky is dark

and sea is light reminds each of his other.

Check out Jared Hayley on Twitter.

April 10: 'Soft' by Jackie York

I have lost soft things

suddenly turned stiff

wept a wall of stone into my skin—

but your yellow eyes can already see through it

your moody meow already pricks up my ears

your heft has made a home on my hip;

I can’t help but let you knead me

paw your way in

 

April 9: Untitled by Mary Katherine Kinniburgh

The cosmos:

a fluttering

colorful bird

that each night, we take out

to play on our fingers

as we sift through books

who eats small seeds

that look like stars

Check out Mary Katherine Kinniburgh's work online and on Twitter.

April 8: 'My Attendant' by Jessica Laser

He saved the seeds 

From an orange I ate.

I like it when he does

This but don’t

Need these seeds. 

“Good. I’ll throw them.” 

As I wrest the Ziploc 

From his hand

I peer into the eyes 

Of my attendant. 

I see there the strings 

I have made taut, 

That they are made 

Of my own muscles. 

I see them waiting 

To be plucked by touch.

Check out Jessica Laser's work online.

 

April 7: "Hello There Pretty Space' by Caroline Reichardt

mysterious planet slime home

has grumpy past

power the rocket ship!

hello there pretty space

Check out Caroline Reichardt's work online.

 

April 6: 'The Moon Lets Go' by Nancy Reddy

Years and years from now the earth will gain

another hour in its day, but I’ll be dead then,

and everyone I love will be gone, too. At daycare dropoff,

my boys wave to me but kiss – mwah! mwah! – each other

through the pre-K room’s goodbye window, 

launching each smooch with a sticky hand and smacking it

against the glass. The moon is small and bound to us by gravity

that’s slowly loosening its grip. I’d wanted them to love each other like this.Check out Nancy Reddy's work in the Library and online.

 

April 5: 'Systemic Risk' by Daniel Borzutzky

You can analyze systemic risk according to how many bodies live or die

             If the system fails the broken bodies become invisible and/or hyper-visible 

             The people are being born and dying 

             They are enacting the invisibility of the security system through the exhibition of their 

                          naked bodies

I eat corrupted data to keep my skin from becoming transparent 

I would rather be a defect of culture than a defect of data or character 

What is not observed gets more visible in relation to the strength of the surveillance

It’s better to deprive a few million people of food than to pull the plug on the global 

             economy

If the consumers don’t buy your product then teach them the meaning of love 

Check out Daniel Borzutzky's work in the Library and online.

April 4: 'Sun-Stuccos Caught Nearby In the Least' by Catherine Blauvelt

The image on my screen defeats the window

in front of me; a shadow behind the moon;

creation without prior text; LOVE as my first person. 

Say one fruit for another fruit: Love, Apple, Ruth.

To be while continuing a little dying breeze over

and over again; till I go up, I am a case.

Check out Catherine Blauvelt's work in the Libraryonline, and on the NYPL staff blog.

 

April 3: 'Heretofore Unuttered' by Nicole Sealey

As if god, despite his compulsions, were decent

and hadn’t the tendency to throw off

all appearance of decorum, here I am

admiring this single violet orchid.

How lucky am I to go unnoticed

or so I imagine, when, at this writing,

there is a red-tailed hawk, somewhere,

tracking the soft shrills of newborn songbirds—?

Check out Nicole Sealey's work in the Libraryonline, and on Twitter.

 

April 2: 'Connections' by Jason Baumann

All of my trains

arrive seconds too

late to catch your

closing doors.

Check out Jason Baumann's work in the Library and online.

April 1: 'A Truth That Tells You' by Maggie Smith

I wish for you a small, portable truth you can take

anywhere—no foreign adaptors needed,

no translation required and nothing lost in it.

Once, looking at a map, my daughter said,A river is a line the world drew for us. I wish for you

a truth that stays true across any line drawn

by the world or its people, a truth that tells you

wherever you arrive, you are welcome.

Check out Maggie Smith's work in the Library, online, and on Twitter.

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For all of NYPL's National Poetry Month festivities, check out nypl.org/poetry.

And for poetry-related programming at your local branch, visit our National Poetry Month Events page. Events include poetry-writing workshops, poetry discussions, and read-ins.