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| Poetry Please start one thread for your own poetry and just add to it! |
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#1 |
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Body and Soul
Half-numb, guzzling bourbon and Coke from coffee mugs, our fathers fall in love with their own stories, nuzzling the facts but mauling the truth, and my friend’s father begins to lay out with the slow ease of a blues ballad a story about sandlot baseball in Commerce, Oklahoma decades ago. These were men’s teams, grown men, some in their thirties and forties who worked together in zinc mines or on oil rigs, sweat and khaki and long beers after work, steel guitar music whanging in their ears, little white rent houses to return to where their wives complained about money and broken Kenmores and then said the hell with it and sang Body and Soul in the bathtub and later that evening with the kids asleep lay in bed stroking their husband’s wrist tattoo and smoking Chesterfields from a fresh pack until everything was O.K. Well, you get the idea. Life goes on, the next day is Sunday, another ball game, and the other team shows up one man short. They say we’re one man short, but can we use this boy, he’s only fifteen years old, and at least he’ll make a game. They take a look at the kid, muscular and kind of knowing the way he holds his glove, with the shoulders loose, the thick neck, but then with that boy’s face under a clump of angelic blonde hair, and say, oh, hell, sure, let’s play ball. So it all begins, the men loosening up, joking about the fat catcher’s sex life, it’s so bad last night he had to hump his wife, that sort of thing, pairing off into little games of catch that heat up into throwing matches, the smack of the fungo bat, lazy jogging into right field, big smiles and arcs of tobacco juice, and the talk that gives a cool, easy feeling to the air, talk among men normally silent, normally brittle and a little angry with the empty promise of their lives. But they chatter and say rock and fire, babe, easy out, and go right ahead and pitch to the boy, but nothing fancy, just hard fastballs right around the belt, and the kid takes the first two but on the third pops the bat around so quick and sure that they pause a moment before turning around to watch the ball still rising and finally dropping far beyond the abandoned tractor that marks left field. Holy shit. They’re pretty quiet watching him round the bases, but then, what the hell, the kid knows how to hit a ball, so what, let’s play some goddamned baseball here. And so it goes. The next time up, the boy gets a look at a very nifty low curve, then a slider, and the next one is the curve again, and he sends it over the Allis Chambers, high and big and sweet. The left fielder just stands there, frozen. As if this isn’t enough, the next time up he bats left-handed. They can’t believe it, and the pitcher, a tall, mean-faced man from Okarche who just doesn’t give a shit anyway because his wife ran off two years ago leaving him with three little ones and a rusted-out Dodge with a cracked block, leans in hard, looking at the fat catcher like he was the sonofabitch who ran off with his wife, leans in and throws something out of the dark, green hell of forbidden fastballs, something that comes in at the knees and then leaps viciously towards the kid’s elbow. He swings exactly the way he did right-handed, and they all turn like a chorus line toward deep right field where the ball loses itself in sagebrush and the sad burnt dust of dustbowl Oklahoma. It is something to see. But why make a long story long: runs pile up on both sides, the boy comes around five times, and five times the pitcher is cursing both God and His mother as his chew of tobacco sours into something resembling horse piss, and a ragged and bruised Spalding baseball disappears into the far horizon. Goodnight, Irene. They have lost the game and some painful side bets and they have been suckered. And it means nothing to them though it should to you when they are told the boy’s name is Mickey Mantle. And that’s the story, and those are the facts. But the facts are not the truth. I think, though, as I scan the faces of these old men now lost in the innings of their youth, I think I know what the truth of this story is, and I imagine it lying there in the weeds behind that Allis Chalmers just waiting for the obvious question to be asked: why, oh why in hell didn’t they just throw around the kid, walk him, after he hit the third homer? Anybody would have, especially nine men with disappointed wives and dirty socks and diminishing expectations for whom winning at anything meant everything. Men who knew how to play the game, who had talent when the other team had nothing except this ringer who without a pitch to hit was meaningless, and they could go home with their little two-dollar side bets and stride into the house singing If You’ve Got the Money, Honey, I’ve Got the Time with a bottle of Southern Comfort under their arms and grab Dixie or May Ella up and dance across the gray linoleum as if it were V-Day all over again. But they did not. And they did not because they were men, and this was a boy. And they did not because sometimes after making love, after smoking their Chesterfields in the cool silence and listening to the big bands on the radio that sounded so glamorous, so distant, they glanced over at their wives and notice the lines growing heavier around the eyes and mouth, felt what their wives felt: that Les Brown and Glenn Miller and all those dancing couples and in fact all possibility of human gaiety and light-heartedness were as far away and unreachable as Times Square or the Avalon ballroom. They did not because of the gray linoleum lying there in the half-dark, the free calendar from the local mortuary that said one day was pretty much like another, the work gloves looped over the doorknob like dead squirrels. And they did not because they had gone through a depression and a war that had left them with the idea that being a man in the eyes of their fathers and everyone else had cost them just too goddamned much to lay it at the feet of a fifteen year-old boy. And so they did not walk him, and lost, but at least had some ragged remnant of themselves to take back home. But there is one thing more, though it is not a fact. When I see my friend’s father staring hard into the bottomless well of home plate as Mantle’s fifth homer heads toward Arkansas, I know that this man with the half-orphaned children and worthless Dodge had also encountered for his first and possibly only time the vast gap between talent and genius, has seen as few have in the harsh light of an Oklahoma Sunday, the blonde and blue-eyed bringer of truth, who will not easily be forgotten. – B. H. Fairchild |
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#2 |
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How Poetry Comes to Me
Gary Snyder It comes blundering over the Boulders at night, it stays Frightened outside the Range of my campfire I go to meet it at the Edge of the light |
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#3 |
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Why I Am Not a Painter
I am not a painter, I am a poet. Why? I think I would rather be a painter, but I am not. Well, for instance, Mike Goldberg is starting a painting. I drop in. "Sit down and have a drink" he says. I drink; we drink. I look up. "You have SARDINES in it." "Yes, it needed something there." "Oh." I go and the days go by and I drop in again. The painting is going on, and I go, and the days go by. I drop in. The painting is finished. "Where's SARDINES?" All that's left is just letters, "It was too much," Mike says. But me? One day I am thinking of a color: orange. I write a line about orange. Pretty soon it is a whole page of words, not lines. Then another page. There should be so much more, not of orange, of words, of how terrible orange is and life. Days go by. It is even in prose, I am a real poet. My poem is finished and I haven't mentioned orange yet. It's twelve poems, I call it ORANGES. And one day in a gallery I see Mike's painting, called SARDINES. Frank O'Hara (1971) |
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#4 |
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Shrinking as they rise, the...
constellations grow so much smaller late at night when I walk softly out of the house, trying not to wake anyone up, sitting here on the blue porch to see Cassiopeia the size of a book- end, Draco the Dragon smaller than a milksnake, realizing again I am shrinking, the picture taken last month in which my son rises above my head so much like the one taken of me and my father as we stood in front of St. Bernard's, my graduation diploma in my folded hands, his pockmarked face looking into my neck, my padded shoulders level with his bloodshot eyes, and I know the bells were ringing and the people all around us were laughing and loudly talking, that cars swished by in the afternoon sun but I just looked down on my father's waved hair, smelled the Schaefer's on his dark breath, refusing to shake his hand which even now holds itself out, twenty-three years after his death, into this clear-night December Pennsylvania air. Len Roberts |
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#5 |
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Put out my eyes, and I can see you still,
Slam my ears to, and I can hear you yet; And without any feet can go to you; And tongueless, I can conjure you at will. Break off my arms, I shall take hold of you And grasp you with my heart as with a hand; Arrest my heart, my brain will beat as true; And if you set this brain of mine afire, Then on my blood-stream I yet will carry you. Rainer Maria Rilke |
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#6 |
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Member
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Whom will you cry to, heart? More and more lonely,
your path struggles on through incomprehensible mankind. All the more futile perhaps for keeping to its direction, keeping on toward the future, toward what has been lost. Once. You lamented? What was it? A fallen berry of jubilation, unripe. But now the whole tree of my jubilation is breaking, in the storm it is breaking, my slow tree of joy. Loveliest in my invisible landscape, you that made me more known to the invisible angels. Translated by Stephen Mitchell Rainer Maria Rilke |
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#7 |
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Senior Member
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Used Book
by Julie Kane What luck—an open bookstore up ahead as rain lashed awnings over Royal Street, and then to find the books were secondhand, with one whole wall assigned to poetry; and then, as if that wasn't luck enough, to find, between Jarrell and Weldon Kees, the blue-on-cream, familiar backbone of my chapbook, out of print since '83— its cover very slightly coffee-stained, but aging (all in all) no worse than flesh though all those cycles of the seasons since its publication by a London press. Then, out of luck, I read the name inside: The man I thought would love me till I died. This one stopped me in my tracks. And I had to reread it see the sonnet and rhyme scheme she wove with deft hands and invisible thread. Just wow. |
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