By Kendel Hippolyte
"What is poetry which does not save nations or people?” – Czselaw Milosz
Ask the question.
Not once but forty-nine times.
And, perhaps at the fiftieth,
you will make an answer.
Or perhaps not. Then
ask it again. This time
till seventy times seven. Ask
as you open the door
of every book of poems that you enter.
Ask it of every poem,
regardless of how beautiful,
that whispers: “Lie with me.”
Do not spare your newborn.
If the first cry, first line
is not a wailing for an answer,
abandon it. As for the stillborn,
turn the next blank white sheet over,
shroud it. Ask the clamouring procession
of all the poems of the ages –
each measured, white-haired epic,
every flouncing free verse debutante –
to state their names, where they have come from
and what their business is with you.
You live in the caesura of our times,
the sound of nations, persons, breaking around you.
If poetry can only save itself,
then who will hear it after it has fled
from the nations and the people that it could not save
even a remnant of for a remembering?
The poem, I’ve always felt, is an opportunity for me to create an integrated whole from so many broken shards --Rafael Campo
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Sunday, April 28, 2019
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
The Palace
It’s hard to remember who I’m talking to
and why. The palace burns, the palace
is fire
and my throne is comfy and
square.
Remember: the old king invited his subjects into his home
to feast on stores of apple tarts and sweet lamb. To feast on sweet lamb of
stories. He believed
they loved him, that his goodness
had earned him their goodness.
Their goodness dragged him into the street
and tore off
his arms, plucked
his goodness out, plucked his fingers out
like feathers.
There are no good kings.
Only beautiful palaces.
Who here could claim to be merely guilty?
The mere.
My life
growing monstrous
with ease.
To be an American my father left his siblings
believing
he’d never see them again. My father
wanted to be Mick Jagger. My father
went full ghost,
ended up working on duck farms for thirty years, once a sleep
a couch,
he coughed up a feather.
America could be a metaphor, but it isn’t.
Asleep on the couch, he coughed up a white duck feather.
There are no doors in America.
Only king-sized holes.
and why. The palace burns, the palace
is fire
and my throne is comfy and
square.
Remember: the old king invited his subjects into his home
to feast on stores of apple tarts and sweet lamb. To feast on sweet lamb of
stories. He believed
they loved him, that his goodness
had earned him their goodness.
Their goodness dragged him into the street
and tore off
his arms, plucked
his goodness out, plucked his fingers out
like feathers.
There are no good kings.
Only beautiful palaces.
Who here could claim to be merely guilty?
The mere.
My life
growing monstrous
with ease.
To be an American my father left his siblings
believing
he’d never see them again. My father
wanted to be Mick Jagger. My father
went full ghost,
ended up working on duck farms for thirty years, once a sleep
a couch,
he coughed up a feather.
America could be a metaphor, but it isn’t.
Asleep on the couch, he coughed up a white duck feather.
There are no doors in America.
Only king-sized holes.
Monday, April 22, 2019
Pesach
By Bracha Meschaninov
House cleaned
more or less
kitchen surfaces covered
more or less
food ready
more or less
an experience of redemption
more or less
House cleaned
more or less
kitchen surfaces covered
more or less
food ready
more or less
an experience of redemption
more or less
Sunday, April 21, 2019
Love Poem
By Timothy Liu
The Lindt Easter bunny
you said was "solid"
chocolate turned out
to be hollow—its head
The Lindt Easter bunny
you said was "solid"
to be hollow—its head
caved in when I peeled
back the gold foil
which was probably
back the gold foil
which was probably
better left wrapped,
every language having
its own version of “beer
every language having
its own version of “beer
goggles.” Sometimes
I like your mouth best
when there’s nothing in it,
I like your mouth best
when there’s nothing in it,
just two rows of teeth
surrounding a tongue
surrounding a tongue
stunned into silence.
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Instructions from the Flight Crew to a Poet of African Descent Living in a State of Emergency
By Kate Rushin
First,
Secure your own oxygen.
Breathe normally,
Then teach the children.
Be not deceived.
Be not of two minds.
We are inadequate
Gasping, fighting for air.
Treasure your song.
Walk to the river
Give thanks at the grotto
Memorize poplar trees
Imitate barn swallows
Be still. Let the deer
Look into your eyes.
First,
Secure your own oxygen.
Breathe normally,
Then teach the children.
Be not deceived.
Be not of two minds.
We are inadequate
Gasping, fighting for air.
Treasure your song.
Walk to the river
Give thanks at the grotto
Memorize poplar trees
Imitate barn swallows
Be still. Let the deer
Look into your eyes.
Tuesday, April 9, 2019
Things That Have Lost Their Power
By Sei Shonagon
A woman who has taken off her false locks to comb the short hair that remains. A large tree that has been blown down in a gale and lies on its side with its roots in the air. The retreating figure of a sumo wrestler who has been defeated in a match. A man of no importance reprimanding an attendant. A woman, who is angry with her husband about some trifling matter, leaves home and goes somewhere to hide. She is certain that he will rush about looking for her; but he does nothing of the kind and shows the most infuriating indifference. Since she cannot stay away forever, she swallows her pride and returns.
Translated by Ivan Morris
A woman who has taken off her false locks to comb the short hair that remains. A large tree that has been blown down in a gale and lies on its side with its roots in the air. The retreating figure of a sumo wrestler who has been defeated in a match. A man of no importance reprimanding an attendant. A woman, who is angry with her husband about some trifling matter, leaves home and goes somewhere to hide. She is certain that he will rush about looking for her; but he does nothing of the kind and shows the most infuriating indifference. Since she cannot stay away forever, she swallows her pride and returns.
Translated by Ivan Morris
Monday, April 1, 2019
Early Evening Visit
By Roxanne Cardona
1.
I admired his penmanship, the red snap
on tie. His shirt, the very white of it,
the beating heart of his elocution.
Joe folded creases of himself
into his seat, curled his "j" s like a nacre
shell, his sharp pencils poked holes into
lined paper. The broken light of him wrapped
into his Batman backpack. I gold starred all
his efforts in my second-grade classroom.
2.
All five feet nine of him stands above
my desk, in the end light of today. Ten years
between second grade and this moment.
His hair curls in wet rings. Joe’s eyes falling
heavy into their lids, the very glint of them,
unnatural as me in this empty school.
Held in the surprise of him.
He's helloing me. And, You look so good-ing me.
His steps neat and clean walk themselves out.
3.
The five o'clock air turns around my car,
its dark. Drive me home pretty teacher?
But it's not the ride he wants. And it's No,
no, no, as we slow dance around the car.
A yank and a click get me in. Joe pulls,
pulls the passenger side door. I twist my key,
rip open the engine. He beats his fists, steeled,
sharp into the locked door. My wheels
race to put distance and time between us.