Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Tuesday poem #670 : Nicholas Selig : Long Lake & Elsewhere

 

 

A 6000-hectare animal
clambers down the Annapolis Valley. 

When wind excuses itself,
our smoky palate dissolves. 

Copper light burrows through the sky.
Ash in last night’s lime crema 

or other worldly injustices. Even then,
it’s easy to forget until your own hill glows. 

 

 

 

 

Nicholas Selig’s poetry has appeared in Contemporary Verse 2, the League of Canadian Poets, and EVENT magazine. He was awarded Nova Scotia’s Rita Joe Poetry prize in 2023.

the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Tuesday poem #669 : Larry Sawyer : Filled with the Memory of Your Porcelain Abandonment

 

I am your animal filled with light.

My eyes are yellow flame.

In the night I 
lurk among the flowers, 
where they lie sleeping. 

Inside each shadow there is an appointment I am keeping. 

I enter the dark and 
sit on a chair 
made only of the evening air. 

When the moon rises I reach up to touch it. Then
I chop off the summer with a hatchet.

Our train arrives at midnight, let’s catch it.




Larry Sawyer (US and Canadian) was a poet, essayist, and fiction writer. His books of poetry include The Blue Butterfly (Guernica, 2027); Daylight Hammer (mother’s milk press, 2021); Breaking Lorca (White Hole Press, 2014); Vertigo Diary (Blaze VOX, 2013); Unable to Fully California (Otoliths Press, 2010), and A Chaise Lounge in Hell (above/ground press, 2003), among many others.

An extensive collection of his poetry and correspondence has been archived at Berkeley University’s Bancroft Library, as well, his poetry has been archived in libraries at Yale, University of Chicago, Ohio State University, UCLA, and in his hometown of Fairborn, Ohio, US.

Originally from Ohio (US), Larry lived in Chicago for 19 years, and recently in Toronto, ON, Canada for 5 years with his longtime collaborator, partner, and fellow poet, Lina Ramona Vitkauskas.

the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Tuesday poem #668 : Farah Ghafoor : Excerpt from "The Last Poet in the World"

 

 

The critic sighs their minutes into hours and the writer wails so the editor takes down the review as the river clasps around their ankles and night crushes even the ants back into the earth and wind pesters the windows for an encore and the children are turned in their beds like good dough and the naked deciduous, finally alone, pity the human language and the stars imagine a life of decision and the moon performs its small vanities and the sedentary flocks do not think about the moon at all and the clouds hold their breath until they crumble and the crumpled mountains ache for their native rock and the machines stare with their long eyes into the enduring dark and the iceberg floats into a dreamless coma and the stories all begin and end on the same note of music.





Farah Ghafoor is the author of Shadow Price (House of Anansi, 2025). Selections of her debut poetry collection won the E.J. Pratt Medal and Prize in Poetry, and were finalists for the CBC Poetry Prize and the Far Horizons Award for Poetry. Her work has appeared in art exhibitions, magazines, and anthologies such as FACE/WASTE, The Walrus, and Halal If You Hear Me (Haymarket Books, 2019), as well as post-secondary course syllabi. Raised in New Brunswick and southern Ontario, Farah resides in Tkaranto (Toronto) where she writes about the intersection of climate change, colonialism, and capitalism.

the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Tuesday poem #667 : Matthew Taylor Blais : Chicama

 

 

At the edge of Peru there is a left
Between that wave and my honeymoon
Lives a hesitation 

Pears for dinner
Prussian Blue for lunch
Nothing for breakfast
My wife doesn't eat breakfast
Stale lemon poppyseed seeps from humid plastic
And once again my coffee has frozen solid
Soy sips drip and I don't feel any more, awake
She points to an airplane and like that
we’re late 

 

 

 

Matthew Taylor Blais is a Canadian artist who has primarily made experimental movies. His work has had success screening around the world, including VIFF, TIFF, and the Berlinale. In 2022 he began writing poetry, and has recently given it his full attention. Matthew currently lives in Coquitlam with his wife and daughters. He has had criticism and poetry published on The Collidescope, and poetry soon to be featured on The Closed Eye Open.

the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan