Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Today I began my term as Maine poet laureate by going for a sunrise walk on Mackworth Island with my dear Teresa. We didn't talk much about poems. Instead, we looked at fog. We spoke of birds. We admired our friends.

Yesterday's rehearsal was hard but good. Whatever it is we are making is beginning to cohere, to become itself.

Here's a very old poem, about a time that Baron Wormser came to my house in Harmony for dinner. . . .


Dinner with the Poet Laureate

 

Dawn Potter


Dissatisfied with the conversation, the four-year-old

keeps poking the tip of a peacock feather into the faces

of the guests; later, slowly eats the rest of the seeded

rolls brushed with egg and baked till golden earlier in the day

by the less good poet, who was nervous both before

 

and after the guests arrived, thinking of Tennyson’s

glossy laureate beard, nails sticking out of the sheetrock,

not enough chairs, and the probability that the four-year-old

would find something along the lines of a peacock feather

with which to terrorize the guests: as when he informed her in-laws,

 

over cocktails, that he planned to be gay when he grew up.

The painter and the photographer begin some chat about galleries

that the poet laureate and the less good poet listen in on,

the less good poet squirming in her chair, self-conscious

about her restlessness.  In a Kate O’Brien novel, the mother

 

superior of an Irish girls’ school, well read in the poetry

of Henry Vaughan, subdues a sense of internal chaos by keeping

her hands quiet at all times. Is this an imposable task?

The physical self is so willful, shamelessly following its bad habits,

while the mind is like an anxious, second-guessing parent.

 

Because the poet laureate asserts that he doesn’t like the music

of Merle Haggard, the photographer has chosen Etta James,

who says she would rather be blind, boy, than see you

walk away from me, babe; sure true about more than one thing

the less good poet can think of: the whole reason the poet laureate

 

has wedged himself at her kitchen table (she hopes); though she worries

they have nothing to say to each other over the second kind of tomato

soup he’s had today, which the four-year-old is deliberately spooning

down the front of his pajamas. Nothing goes as planned;

think of a sonnet unleashing its skewed logic down the page,

 

careening around every turn.  The Burden of the Mystery,

Keats called this beetle-browed unease she feels, wishing

for pleasure, for confidence in a situation that seems close to tears,

with Etta vanished, the painter trying to explain the odd path

her career has taken, the photographer a father wiping soup


off the four-year-old with a dishcloth.

The less good poet pours out the last of the Riesling.

All the ways the mind works, folding in on itself—

John Berryman with those poems about Chris, falling-down

drunk in her capri pants on a ratty hearthrug; and here,

 

four people eating dinner with a child whom the photographer calls

the Boy Tyrant when he’s lying in bed with the less good poet

smoking a bowl and rehashing the evening; and she reminds

him of the poem in which she imagines having thrown

the four-year-old off a bridge, an exhilarating aspect of the art,

 

like being possessed by a kind of honest evil spirit,

a sort of longing for the truth of the matter, something analagous

to what she feels now, propped up beside the photographer,

his face shadowed under the dim lamp, broad-boned and mercurial:

the desire that overtakes her for vision—

 

to be able to take in everything and align it in some stately

Spenserian array, heavy as alabaster and ivory, remote as heaven,

in a poem that uses the word crimson in a way that really works.

The problem with being a less good poet is the triviality that arises,

like fog spreading over a window. Just when she thinks she’s run up against

 

something really important, her thoughts stage-dive into the crowd.

What does a real poet imagine over the dish pan?

Did T. S. Eliot idly vacuum the same section of carpet twenty times,

let the rhythm of a line circle around him like a fish,

hum a tune in the key of the motor while Vivienne

 

broke things in the next room?  The less good poet cannot

manage to put herself into anyone else’s shoes: the whole

world seems fixed on herself, the center of a tiny Aristotelean

universe plagued by the malignant orbit of the four-year-old,

paid employment, and laundry.  Asleep, the photographer

 

emits a small snore, emblematic of the calm order of his own

more Galilean universe, where steady hard work produces

superior results and nothing keeps him awake, not even

a less good poet looking for love, whose mind is a castle

honeycombed with a thousand passageways—

 

climbing and twisting, falling into endless loops and permutations;

and there is no way out, no way at all.  But she wants him

to know she’s here, as she wants to believe that the painter

has left this house in the country to sit in the dark passenger

seat of a reliable Subaru, mesmerized by the windshield wipers

 

sweeping back and forth in their dark mirror, a sweetness

like tires hissing down a wet street; that the poet laureate reads

Pope as woodchucks browse in his kale and cats do nothing

to stop them; that Snow White and Rose Red wander

through the forest hand in hand, but no beast dares touch

 

one hair of their heads—that there is a way to compose

these pieces into patterns of great beauty and precision,

as a clock ticks, as a falcon flies over a woodland edge,

crying its hunger in heroic couplets.  The world conflates into Milton’s

royal image, but didn’t Keats wrestle with exactly this pain?

 

When the four-year-old wakes in the morning and puts on his cowboy mask

with a smile, the less good poet will dish out yogurt and orange juice,

while Shakespeare brews more coffee and the diminution of space

points their love as sharp as a needle, the image rocking her back

on her heels as if it were her own. At another dinner, the painter

 

and the poet laureate, even the buzzing four-year-old, might hear

those words ringing off the countertops, off the bones of her skull;

the photographer, on his way to hunt out that Merle Haggard tune

about Roman sandals, stopping to listen—every sound a chime,

a thought, a heartbeat; each phrase a life lived over and over.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The morning air is beautifully cool, but this will be our last dreamy weather for a while. Fierce heat will kick in tomorrow, and Maine will morph into a roasting pan, and Chuck will have to learn to love an air conditioner.

For the moment, though, he can still goggle at robins through the open windows, and I can still curl up in my couch corner in my fuzzy bathrobe and listen to the gulls argue. But this is a brief reverie. In a few minutes I'll be on the work clock again, hustling through chores, packing a lunch, collecting scripts and pens and notebook, catching my ride, rehearsing all day. I'm excited about being back in the studio with my friends . . . also worried that we've bitten off more than we can chew, but that's just my nerves talking. It will be a fun week, and we'll do what we can do, which will have to be good enough.

Monday, June 29, 2026

It looks like our ideal Maine summer weather is about to explode into beastliness. By Wednesday temperatures will climb into the high 80s and 90s, and my sweet temperate flower garden will start to fry. Ugh.

Well, at least we have a couple of respite days before Hades arrives. For now the grass and garden are in good shape, and yesterday I even managed to talk myself into washing windows, a chore I particularly dislike. So today I'll get my weekly housework done, run errands, keep pulling materials together for Monson, and otherwise prepare for deserting my household post.

Last week I received a request from a poet wanting permission to reprint my poem "A History of Wash Day" in a column she writes for a midcoast newspaper. She asked if I could also add a few words about how the poem was made? Sure, I said, and without thinking overly hard about the matter scribbled down a couple of sentences about housework, which quickly became a couple of paragraphs, which quickly became way more text than the poet could possibly fit into a little newspaper column. Clearly I have a lot to blab about housework. That poem, in fact, was supposed to be an essay--at least that was my intention when I did the research behind it. I've never been clear, given my volubility on the subject, why the piece insisted on reducing itself to lines. But the mysteries of poems are never-ending.


A History of Wash Day

 

Dawn Potter


Sunday night you sort the clothes, whites from greens,

browns from red, and now by fabric—woolen or linen?

cotton or silk?—and were they smudged in the pew,

 

or fouled in the barn? Soak overnight (bucket after bucket

from the dooryard pump), each pile in its own

watery tub, then rest yourself (nurse a baby, darn a sock)

 

so that on Monday, at dawn (corset pinching your lungs),

you can turn your thoughts to draining your first tub: a heap

of pale church attire (lye soap glistens in an oily basin).

 

Pour in hot suds (stove ablaze with wood lugged

before daybreak), and scrub each foaming bodice

against the washboard (knuckles scraped raw).

 

Wring out the garments, rub fresh soap on stubborn filth,

heave the sodden mess into the cauldron on the stove, 

(kitchen pulsing with heat), add water (bucket after bucket

 

from the dooryard pump), and boil it up (steam thick as night).

Rest (nurse a baby, fry meat for men), then dip the clothes

out of the boiler (burn yourself), rub dirty spots again

 

(will soap supply last till butchering time?), rinse load in plain water

(bucket after bucket from the dooryard pump), wring out clothes,

rinse in a tub of bluing (store-bought bottle is running low), twist dry,

 

then mix up a tin pan of starch water, dip each item (nurse

the screaming baby), wring once more, hang clothes on the line

in the dooryard till they are perfectly dry

 

and repeat every step on every heap of garments, in this order:

darker, coarser, dirtier. Life could be harder.

You could live in the city, begin every work week of your life

 

lugging gallons of water through horseshit, across glare ice,

up five narrow flights of a tenement. Maybe you wash 

for eight sloppy sons, a pair of dying incontinent parents,

 

five or six live-in boarders, or an owner who whips you

when you overlook a cherry stain. On your knees by the tub,

you scrub out brick dust and urine; you line-dry your sheets

 

in a breeze thick with soot.  How much coal must a woman carry

(oh, the price of coal!) to keep her stove hot enough to boil a lake

of wash-water in a single day?  What of the baby (scooting

 

across the kitchen floor)? What of you

(weighted with baskets, blinded by steam)?

What of duty (monstrous, eternal)?

 

No time to pray. Tomorrow is ironing day.



[from Calendar (Deerbrook Editions, 2024)]

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Invisible in the fog, a chickadee sings DEE-dee, DEE-dee. Is there a word for this gray no-light air, this dusk before dawn? Through the screen door, snakes of fog twine into the kitchen--damp, cool, tinged with salt. This is summer Maine of the storybooks . . . dew-wet, shiver of breeze, windows flung open to the tender chill.

It's my last quiet morning for a while, and I am awake too early, but it's hard to regret sleep with such loveliness around me. Flowers, bowing under fog weight, glow like jewels--gold, rose, magenta, lemon, cream. In the quince a chickadee repeats, repeats. Behind her ostinato a robin bubbles, a sparrow chitters.  Speckles of milky sky prick the vast shadow canopy of the maples. This tiny plot, this miniature realm . . . I wander from window to window, amazed.

A few things will happen this week. The big one will be Teresa's arrival tomorrow afternoon, triggering our flurried plunge into rehearsal mode. Then, on Wednesday, I will officially become poet laureate of Maine. There's no ceremony planned, no formality I need to step up for. Still, I'll feel at least a mental shift. Publicly I've mostly laid low since the April announcement. Primarily, I haven't wanted to take the shine off Julia Bouwsma's last few months in the position. But also I've needed time to come to grips with the idea of the job. I am a different person from Julia, from all of the previous laureates. It's important to learn from them but not imitate them. The question has been "what will I bring to the task?" I don't just mean "what projects will I do?" but "what qualities of myself must I share?"

Saturday, June 27, 2026

It's foggy this morning, and two cute exasperating brown bunnies are skipping and hopping around and under my neighbor's car. These bunnies are an invasive species that has suddenly exploded in Portland, and I am not delighted. I admit they are adorable. But so were the tribbles in that Star Trek episode.

However, I am delighted that I slept in till 6 a.m. on this Saturday morning. For some reason Chuck didn't work very hard to wake me, and my body, still convalescing from its long stretch of car-related insomnia, took advantage of his neglect.

For me, waking up at 6 is the equivalent of wallowing, so I feel quite smug this morning. Look at me, sleeping in on a Saturday: I'm like a regular guy.

This weekend I need to weed the front garden beds and mow grass. I'd also like to go for a bike ride as I've been out only once so far this summer. Meanwhile, Gloria can relax in the driveway and enjoy the bunnies. She'll get plenty of attention next week.

Now the gulls are screeching, and sun is grappling with the remains of the fog, and I'm remembering that there's most of a strawberry pie in the refrigerator, and I'm thinking about all of the work ahead in the next couple of weeks and getting excited about it. Rehearsing, teaching, playing, writing, performing, listening, celebrating, plus hanging out by the lake with some of my favorite people . . . wot larks, as sweet Joe muses to Pip in Great Expectations, a book I should reread soon. Maybe I'll bring it along to Monson.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Yesterday was an out-and about day--a trip up the coast (across the coast? down the coast? directions are confusing when one is winding among the spits and fingers of the midcoast) to have lunch with a friend, then errands, and then my writing group. I did all of the driving because that is the protocol: the person with the new car has to do all of the driving for the first few days and then everything can go back to normal. But I was glad to let Gloria stretch her legs on the highway and the back roads, and I have almost figured out how her buttons work. Gloria, by the way, is the Mazda's name. The Impreza was Tina--chosen because my boys suggested that I name her in honor of one Harmony's leading citizens. I see no reason to break that pattern.

This morning it's raining lightly. I need to drag the trash out to the curb, and get my walk in; I need to deal with a bunch of desk stuff; I've got to figure out something to make for dinner, and I have two quarts of strawberries to hull and transform into a pie. I also have a couple of draft blurts from last night's writing prompts to mess around with. If the rain slows to a mist, I'd like to weed the front gardens. I might run an errand or two.

These next couple of days will be my last hurrah with unemployment. On Monday evening Teresa will arrive from Florida and the conference faculty will leap back into rehearsal mode--a repeat of our Sarasota residency schedule, but this time we'll be working in the Bowdoin dance studio, a 40-minute drive north of Portland. Then, on Sunday, we'll head up to Monson and plunge into the joyous netherworld that is the conference. I'm excited about this year's participants--a mix of old friends and new . . . people who once attended the Frost Place iteration but whom I haven't seen for several years; people I've worked with online through Studio Session and Poetry Kitchen classes; local poets as well as people who are brand-new to me. We're fully subscribed, which makes the Monson Arts folks very happy, and it makes me happy as well. I'm so glad this conference remains vital and lively. I'm so glad participants love the new digs.

Every once in a while I read an elegiac Facebook post lamenting the Frost Place old days. This is, I will admit, painful for me. The truth is that the conference is more stable and more adventurous than it was able to be at the Frost Place. I loved that setting too, and I suffered, on many levels, when I made the decision to leave it. But the move turned out to be very good for both the creative growth of the conference and my own mental health. Having everyone together on the same campus makes both the classroom and the social sides more cohesive. Having an in-place staff that handles all non-program logistics means that I can focus entirely on my real job without exhausting myself into a smear of tears. Working in a place where poetry is just one of many endeavors to celebrate is uplifting and stimulating. Like the Frost Place, Monson Arts is beautiful, historic, arty, welcoming. It is also comfortable, which was not a prime feature of the FP. The only thing missing here is Robert Frost's ghost. But the truth is there are a lot of other fantastic ghosts floating around out there who are eager to be welcomed in.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

I slept like a stunned ox last night, reeling in from our movie-and-late-dinner evening and immediately stumbling up to bed and into unconsciousness. I was not even slightly tipsy; I was just tired tired tired. Car worries have notably messed with my rest over the past few weeks, so a giant sleep was both vital and inevitable, and last night it arrived with a bang.

Now here I sit with my coffee, blinking and groggy. Sunlight fingers the neighbor's roof. Nearby a cardinal warns Jericho, Jericho, oh no, then flits to a distant shrub to repeat himself. A car sighs up the street and around the corner. An airplane grumbles into takeoff. The little northern city by the sea begins to phrase its daytime song.

I spent much of yesterday metaphorically tying up various strings and tatters: dealing with scheduling, paperwork, emails; sussing out project stuff, making lists, clearing now-unnecessary piles of this-and-that. Though nothing I did was especially creative, it felt good to be reentering the word world, even at its most pedestrian level. Holding a book is not the same as reading a book, but it's not nothing either. And arranging my physical, temporal, and thought spaces welcomes the work that will eventually happen there.

Which is a pompous way of saying I cleaned my desk.