Sunday, April 17, 2016

The Moment

by Margaret Atwood

The moment when, after many years
of hard work and a long voyage
you stand in the centre of your room,
house, half-acre, square mile, island, country,
knowing at last how you got there,
and say, I own this,

is the same moment when the trees unloose
their soft arms from around you,
the birds take back their language,
the cliffs fissure and collapse,
the air moves back from you like a wave
and you can't breathe.

No, they whisper. You own nothing.
You were a visitor, time after time
climbing the hill, planting the flag, proclaiming.
We never belonged to you.
You never found us.
It was always the other way round. 


Friday, January 15, 2016

Burning Oneself Out

 
Adrienne Rich

We can look into the stove tonight
as into a mirror, yes,

the serrated log, the yellow-blue gaseous core

the crimson-flittered grey ash, yes.
I know inside my eyelids
and underneath my skin

Time takes hold of us like a draft
upward, drawing at the heats
in the belly, in the brain

You told me of setting your hand
into the print of a long-dead Indian
and for a moment, I knew that hand,

that print, that rock,
the sun producing powerful dreams
A word can do this

or, as tonight, the mirror of the fire
of my mind, burning as if it could go on
burning itself, burning down

feeding on everything
till there is nothing in life
that has not fed that fire

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Some Dorothy Allison

“We all nourish truth with our tongues
not in sour-batter words that never take shape
nor line-driven stories bent to skirt the edge
of our great exhaustion, desire, and doubt.
We all use simply the words of our own lives
to say what we really want,
to lie spent on our lovers,
put teeth to all we hate,
to strain the juice of our history
between what has been allowed
and what has always been denied,
the active desire to take hold of the root.”  


“I need you to do more than survive. As writers, as revolutionaries, tell the truth, your truth in your own way. Do not buy into their system of censorship, imagining that if you drop this character or hide that emotion, you can slide through their blockades. Do not eat your heart out in the hope of pleasing them"
The Women Who Hate Me Poetry 1980-1990
-Allison ...

Thursday, November 5, 2015

"What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open."
-Muriel Rukeyser

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Poem

This week, a 5 year old boy I know will leave Shelter. I will never forget him.

Somewhere, beyond all that
spins, a young man is standing
motionless, not a ripple near

He can barely speak
about the altitude,
the caverns,
the Terror

The time he lifted a boy in shards
from a jagged rock, tearing teeth
from his torso, placing a palm
over the strange stare in his eyes

Mound by mound, they climbed
around the edges of the canyon
to the very top

Never again to cower
in the dark

Saturday, August 16, 2014

This is a good poem.

Slow Fuse Around the Cranium


Another gutshot dawn, and the day
Wakes to a crow alarm clock.
Have the birds turned anti-American, little
Feathered terrorists in the heartland of sleep?

 
Inside the wreckage, I can't tell if
The coffee cup's half empty or half full,
But it's all caffeine, wetting down
That thistle at the back of my throat.

 
Ah, sun, it's a hard morning
For you, too, those low clouds black
As a pew of Presbyterian elders, set
To ruin your reputation for a hot time.

 
For weeks now, the air's hung heavy
Over everything, the soap so soft
It's like a palmful of ectoplasm: not even
A cold shower can make me come clean.

 
For weeks now, my mind's felt both
Shifty and shiftless, brain waves no more than
Motion in love with itself, and less spry
Than old women with a leg up on ninety.

 
Maybe I should move from the Midwest
To the Mideast, some sandy place you know
Where you stand, like a lame camel,
Bad knees bent between God and atrocity.

 
But the heat's already here, and the caterpillars
Have raised their tents in the summer trees.
Why stir the one-eye mullahs, when I can
Flay myself in the doldrums of my own home?

 
I'm at the age for adages and elegies:
What there's no help for, let go. Not until
The fat's in the fire will it sing for you.
Even the sheen of day darkens in the dark heart.

 
Like those spazzed-out insects on the patio,
I've spun myself to a dither, and who knows
When I'll come sliding back, bone and soul,
To the absolute enormities of whatever life

 
The future might ring in, the rich bronze
Midnight tone of some Mongolian death gong,
Loud enough to stun the years and make me take it
All in good faith and down to the quick.
 
 
(Elton Glaser, Southern Poetry Review, Volume 51, Issue 2)
 

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Alexander McCall Smith

Acacia

Notwane River
















This week I picked up The Kalahari Typing School For Men,  the story of Mma Ramotswe, keeping her business afloat in Gaborone, Botswana.  I sometimes feel like my visit there in college was just a short, passing dream.  I will always remember the stillness, the smells, the sounds.

     '"Those are small things," Mr. Molefelo interjected. "Bills and debts are nothing, really. What really counts are the things that you have done to people. That is what counts. And that is why I've come to see you , Mma. I want to confess. I do not go to the Catholic Church, where you can sit in a box and tell the priest all about the things you have done. I cannot do that. But I want to talk to somebody, and that is why I have come to see you."
      Ma Ramotswe nodded. She unnderstood. Shortly after opening the No. I Ladies' Detective Agency, she had discovered that part of her role would be to listen to people and to help them unburden themselves of their past. And indeed her subsequent reading of Clovis Andersen had confirmed this. Be gentle, he had written. Many of the people who will come to see you are injured in spirit. They need to talk about things that have hurt them, or about things that they have done. Do not sit in judgement of them, but listen. Just listen.
      They had reached a place where the path dipped down into a dried-up watercourse. There was a termite mound to one side of it, and on the other, a small expanse of rock rising out of the red earth. There was the chewed-up pith of sugarcane lying to the side of the path and a fragment of broken blue glass, which caught the sun. Not far away a goat was standing on its hind legs, nibbling at the less accessible leaves of the shrub.  It was a good place to sit and listen, under a sky that had seen so much and heard so much that one more wicked deed would surely make no difference. Sins, thought Mma Ramotswe, are darker and more powerful when contemplated within confining walls. Out in the open, under such a sky as this, misdeeds were reduced to their natural proportions--small, mean things that could be faced quite openly, sorted, and folded away.'