After Turner (“Sunrise with Sea Monsters”)

Bin Ramke

Who loves without knowing howyou are loved without knowingwe have not met the sun follows youdown streets in winter its cold golda terror to some a joy to somethe moon follows me around the sunall the year it whirls spiralingunaware unconcerned a puppykeeping its one face turned properlyis what it is like to lovethis is what it is to be unloved butunconcerned: to wander followingthe days and leaves turning forgettingage forgetting that once withoutpain there was no reasonto fear the shapes clouds could assume;I could live there another life if offeredin the cave of that cloud, there.

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Bin Ramke teaches at the University of Denver, but for a time also taught at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago where he often visited their Turners. His first book was published in 1979.

Cover of the Book, Earth on Earth

Oakland, California

Poems that personally engage with the materiality and danger of earth.

A kind of translation of the thousand-year-old poem “Earth Took of Earth,” this book is an attempt to restate in personal, emotional terms a sense of both the danger of and the consolation given by earth itself. Many of these poems arose during a collaboration with the ecologist-ceramicist Mia Mulvey: her work with earth, clay often extruded through digitally guided machinery, echoes Ramke’s attempts to understand damages done to and celebrate the facts of earth—for instance, that geosmin, the scent of wet soil, is so powerfully recognizable even in trace amounts. The title of this book is also a play on the phrase “heaven on earth,” turning this idea around and encouraging us to instead turn our hopes toward earth on earth.

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