incorrigibletenderness
incorrigibletenderness
an archive of (mostly) poetry
95 posts
"If prose is a house, poetry is a man on fire running quite fast through it." —Anne Carson
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Elms by Louise Glück
All day I tried to distinguish
need from desire. Now, in the dark,
I feel only bitter sadness for us,
the builders, the planers of wood,
because I have been looking
steadily at these elms
and seen the process that creates
the writhing, stationary tree
is torment, and have understood
it will make no forms but twisted forms.
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Pear Tree by Rachel
Conspiracy of spring
a man awakes and through the window sees
a pear tree blossoming,
and instantly the mountain weighing on his heart
dissolves and disappears.
O you will understand! Is there a grieving man
who can hold on stubbornly
to a single flower that withered
in last year’s autumn gale,
when spring consoles and with a smile
presents him with a giant wreath of flowers
at his very window?
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Tomboy by Claudia Masin
translated by Robin Myers
I don’t understand how we walk around the world
as if there were a single way for each of us, a kind
of life stamped into us like a childhood injection,
a cure painstakingly released into the blood with every passing year
like a poison transmuted into antidote
against any possible disobedience that might
awaken in the body. But the body isn’t mere
submissive matter, a mouth that cleanly swallows
whatever it’s fed. It’s a lattice
of little filaments, as I imagine
threads of starlight must be. What can never
be touched: that’s the body. What lives outside
the law when the law is muscled and violent,
a boulder plunging off a precipice
and crushing everything in its path. How do they manage
to wander around so happily and comfortably in their bodies, how
do they feel so sure, so confident in being what they are: this blood,
these organs, this sex, this species? Haven’t they ever longed
to be a lizard scorching in the sun
every day, or an old man, or a vine
clutching a trunk in search of somewhere
to hold on, or a boy sprinting till his heart
bursts from his chest with sheer brute energy,
with sheer desire? We’re forced
to be whatever we resemble. Haven’t
you ever wished you knew what it would feel like to have claws
or roots or fins instead of hands, what it would mean
if you could only live in silence
or by murmuring or crying out
in pain or fear or pleasure? Or if there weren’t any words
at all and so the soul of every living thing were measured
by the intensity it manifests
once it’s set free?
/
Yo no sé cómo se hace para andar por el mundo
como si solo hubiera una posibilidad para cada cual,
una manera de estar vivos inoculada en las venas durante la niñez,
un remedio que va liberándose lentamente en la sangre
a lo largo de los años igual que un veneno
que se convierte en un antídoto
contra cualquier desobediencia que pudiera
despertarse en el cuerpo. Pero el cuerpo no es
una materia sumisa, una boca que traga limpiamente
aquello con que se la alimenta. Es un entramado
de pequeños filamentos, como imagino que son los hilos
de luz de las estrellas. Lo que nunca podría
ser tocado: eso es el cuerpo. Lo que siempre
queda afuera de la ley cuando la ley es maciza
y violenta, una piedra descomunal cayendo
desde lo alto de una cima
arrasando lo que encuentra. ¿Cómo pueden entonces
andar tan cómodos y felices en su cuerpo, cómo hacen
para tener la certeza, la seguridad de que son eso: esa sangre,
esos órganos, ese sexo, esa especie? ¿Nunca quisieron
ser un lagarto prendido cada día del calor del sol
hasta quemarse el cuero, un hombre viejo, una enredadera
apretándose contra el tronco de un árbol para tener de dónde
sostenerse, un chico corriendo hasta que el corazón
se le sale del pecho de pura energía brutal,
de puro deseo? Nos esforzamos tanto
por ser aquello a lo que nos parecemos. ¿Nunca
se te ocurrió cómo sería si en lugar de manos tuvieras garras
o raíces o aletas, cómo sería
si la única manera de vivir fuera en silencio o aullando
de placer o de dolor o de miedo,
si no hubiera palabras
y el alma de cada cosa viva se midiera
por la intensidad de la que es capaz una vez
que queda suelta?
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Arroz Poetica by Aracelis Girmay
I got news yesterday from a friend of mine that all people against the war should send a bag of rice to George Bush, & on the bag we should write, "If your enemies are hungry, feed them." But to be perfectly clear, my enemies are not hungry. They are not standing in lines for food, or stretching rations, or waiting at the airports to claim the pieces of the bodies of their dead. My enemies ride jets to parties. They are not tied up in pens in Guantanamo Bay. They are not young children throwing rocks. My enemies eat meats & vegetables at tables in white houses where candles blaze, cast shadows of crosses, & flowers. They wear ball gowns & suits & rings to talk of war in neat & folded languages that will not stain their formal dinner clothes or tousle their hair. They use words like "casualties" to speak of murder. They are not stripped down to skin & made to stand barefoot in the cold or hot. They do not lose their children to this war. They do not lose their houses & their streets. They do not come home to find their lamps broken. They do not ever come home to find their families murdered or disappeared or guns put at their faces. Their children are not made to walk a field of mines, exploding. This is no wedding. This is no feast. I will not send George Bush rice, worked for rice from my own kitchen where it sits in a glass jar & I am transfixed by the thousands of beautiful pieces like a watcher at some homemade & dry aquarium of grains, while the radio calls out the local names of 2,000 US soldiers counted dead since March. &, we all know it, there will always be more than what's been counted. They will not say the names of an Iraqi family trying to pass a checkpoint in an old white van. A teenager caught out on some road after curfew. The radio will go on, shouting the names &, I promise you, they will not call your name, Hassna Ali Sabah, age 30, killed by a missile in Al-Bassra, or you, Ibrahim Al-Yussuf, or the sons of Sa'id Shahish on a farm outside of Baghdad, or Ibrahim, age 12, as if your blood were any less red, as if the skins that melted were any less skin, & the bones that broke were any less bone, as if your eradication were any less absolute, any less eradication from this earth where you were not a president or a military soldier. & you will not ever walk home again, or smell your mother's hair again, or shake the date palm tree or smell the sea or hear the people singing at your wedding or become old or dream or breathe, or even pray or whistle, & your tongue will be all gone or useless & it will not ever say again or ask a question, you, who were birthed once, & given milk, & given names that mean: she is born at night, happy, favorite daughter, morning, heart, father of a multitude. Your name, I will have noticed on a list collected by an Iraqi census of the dead, because your name is the name of my own brother, because your name is the Tigrinya word for "tomorrow," because all my life I have wanted a farm, because my students are 12, because I remember when my sisters were 12. & I will not have ever seen your eyes, & you will not have ever seen my eyes or the eyes of the ones who dropped the missiles, or the eyes of the ones who ordered the missiles, & the missiles have no eyes. You had no chance, the way they fell on avenues & farms & clocks & schoolchildren. There was no place for you & so you burned. A bag of rice will not bring you back. A poem cannot bring you. & although it is my promise here to try to open every one of my windows, I cannot imagine the intimacy with which a life leaves its body, even then, in detonation, when the skull is burst, & the body's country of indivisible organs flames into the everything. & even in that quick departure as the life rushes on, headlong or backwards, there must, must be some singing as the hand waves "be well" to its other hand, goodbye; & the ear belongs to the field now. & we cannot separate the roof from the heart from the trees that were there, standing. & so it is, when I say "night," it is your name I am calling, when I say "field," your thousand, thousand names, your million names.
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Bad New Government by Emily Berry
Love, I woke in an empty flat to a bad new government;
it was cold the fridge was still empty my heart, that junkie,
was still chomping on the old fuel vroom, I start the day like a tired
motorcyclist I want to go very fast and email you about the following
happy circumstances: early rosebuds, a birthday party, a new cake recipe but
today it’s hot water bottles and austerity breakfast and my toast burns in protest
You are not here of course but you live in me like a tiny valve of a man
you light up my chambers Later I will call to tell you about the new
prime minister, the worrying new developments and about how
I am writing my first political poem which is also (always) about my love for you
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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How Judas Died by Gabrielle Bates
There’s a bird believed to suck the teats of goats at night.
Flocks alight swollen on the slash pines while we sleep.
Here, in this dark field, among what’s been cast out
from the body of birds, goats, and men, Am I late or early?
is a question. It asks the black grass against my face.
Without light, every color is a past someone decided
to believe in. The official account is this:
Judas’s organs burst from his body in an open field
or he hanged himself from a tree. It was after dark
or it was day, and on the other side of the world,
a soldier’s ear, severed from cochlea, was free of the mind
to listen properly to the dust. Cartilage coil in a street,
it spills, and this is silence. Or this is silence
betraying itself as currency. If Judas coughs up a coin
into my hand, let it be night—the birds, hungry.
If I put what was once liquid metal in my mouth, let my mouth
become a glossy orange arm reaching up out of the mold
back into crucible, then pouring out again.
Body from body, speech from speech.
Judas is there, fully eared, in the sunbright street
or he is the nightly sigh of a fat-uddered goat going dry.
The throaty creak of a branch, or the flapping of wings.
Which or both or neither, I am listening. As milk slithers back
from beak to nipple. He unbreaks his neck with a rope.
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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the lost women by Lucille Clifton
i need to know their names
those women i would have walked with
jauntily the way men go in groups
swinging their arms, and the ones
those sweating women whom i would have joined
after a hard game to chew the fat
what would we have called each other laughing
joking into our beer? where are my gangs,
my teams, my mislaid sisters?
all the women who could have known me,
where in the world are their names?
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Thanks by W.S Merwin
Listen
with the night falling we are saying thank you
we are stopping on the bridges to bow from the railings
we are running out of the glass rooms
with our mouths full of food to look at the sky
and say thank you
we are standing by the water thanking it
standing by the windows looking out
in our directions
back from a series of hospitals back from a mugging
after funerals we are saying thank you
after the news of the dead
whether or not we knew them we are saying thank you
over telephones we are saying thank you
in doorways and in the backs of cars and in elevators
remembering wars and the police at the door
and the beatings on stairs we are saying thank you
in the banks we are saying thank you
in the faces of the officials and the rich
and of all who will never change
we go on saying thank you thank you
with the animals dying around us
taking our feelings we are saying thank you
with the forests falling faster than the minutes
of our lives we are saying thank you
with the words going out like cells of a brain
with the cities growing over us
we are saying thank you faster and faster
with nobody listening we are saying thank you
thank you we are saying and waving
dark though it is
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Famous by Naomi Shihab Nye
The river is famous to the fish.
The loud voice is famous to silence,
which knew it would inherit the earth
before anybody said so.
The cat sleeping on the fence is famous to the birds
watching him from the birdhouse.
The tear is famous, briefly, to the cheek.
The idea you carry close to your bosom
is famous to your bosom.
The boot is famous to the earth,
more famous than the dress shoe,
which is famous only to floors.
The bent photograph is famous to the one who carries it
and not at all famous to the one who is pictured.
I want to be famous to shuffling men
who smile while crossing streets,
sticky children in grocery lines,
famous as the one who smiled back.
I want to be famous in the way a pulley is famous,
or a buttonhole, not because it did anything spectacular,
but because it never forgot what it could do.
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Commas in Dante by Jessica Laser
Loosed from the rain, suspended
like a bough that broke and didn’t fall,
Sergei returned to fix the fake fire.
I’d worried the pilot was on too strong.
Though he fixed it for free, fire
always means profit and free
in this case means already paid.
“Finally,” I calculated,
“I found out I love you.
We achieved the physical
life of difference
we’d always held from each other inside.
I saw your life as if across a stage
I had tossed you a looking glass.
There are so many ways to think of us
that I have thought them all.
In one, we’ve been a painting
to which we were in a museum drawn,
stood peering at it for days
imagining the essays
and then we walked away.
In another, we preferred to dine
with literary people of unliterary sympathies,
who said at the restaurant, humiliating the effort,
Get your head out of books. Write for the waitress.
I close down around me like a thousand-petaled lotus
when I privilege my sympathy with others
over my system of belief, my thought
that at times I have no sympathy
at all, none except my own belief
that I have no belief
that is not a sympathy.
Freeing myself from what ailed me in others
gave me room to encounter someone new.
That’s how I took you, as someone
working for but excluded by virtue.”
“Makes me feel dumb,”
he said of my poem.
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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Highbury Park by Liz Berry
In the woods at night men are fucking
amongst the gorgeous piñatas of the rhododendrons,
the avenue of cool limes.
By day I walk my son down the secret pathways,
smell the salt rime of sex on the wind,
a condom glowing with blossomy cum,
knotted and flung; I bury it gently
under the moss with my boots.
I envy them, these lovers, dark pines
beneath their knees, the tarry earth
opaline with the desire paths of snails,
fallen feathers in the dirt like warnings.
I know those days of aching to be touched
by no-one who knows you.
After he was born I wanted nothing but the wind
to hold me, the soft-mouthed breeze
coaxing my skin like the grass
from a trampled field.
How heavenly it seemed then, light shafting
emerald through wounded leaves,
the woods a church, we its worshippers,
and all that sex - freed from love and duty -
like being taken by the wind, swept
from the cloistered rooms of your life,
stripped and blown,
then jilted dazzling in the arms of the trees.
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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To the Woman Crying Uncontrollably in the Next Stall by Kim Addonizio
If you ever woke in your dress at 4am ever
closed your legs to a man you loved opened
them for one you didn’t moved against
a pillow in the dark stood miserably on a beach
seaweed clinging to your ankles paid
good money for a bad haircut backed away
from a mirror that wanted to kill you bled
into the back seat for lack of a tampon
if you swam across a river under rain sang
using a dildo for a microphone stayed up
to watch the moon eat the sun entire
ripped out the stitches in your heart
because why not if you think nothing &
no one can / listen I love you joy is coming
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incorrigibletenderness · 6 years ago
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The Life of Trees by Dorianne Laux
The pines rub their great noise
into the spangled dark.
They scratch their itchy boughs
against the house and the mystery
of that moan translates
into drudgery of ownership: time
to drag the ladder from the shed,
climb onto the roof with a saw
between my teeth, cut those suckers down.
What’s reality if not a long exhaustive
cringe from the blade,
the teeth? I want to sleep
and dream the life of trees, beings
from the muted world who care nothing
for Money, Politics, Power,
Will or Right, who want little from the night
but a few dead stars going dim, a white owl
lifting from their limbs, who want only
to sink their roots into the wet ground
and terrify the worms or shake
their bleary heads like fashion models
or old hippies. If trees could speak,
they wouldn’t, only hum some low
green note, roll their pinecones
down the empty streets and blame it,
with a shrug, on the cold wind.
During the day they sleep inside
their furry bark, clouds shredding
like ancient lace above their crowns.
Sun. Rain. Snow. Wind. They fear
nothing but the Hurricane, and Fire,
that whipped bully who rises up
and becomes his own dead father.
In the gale winds the young ones
bend and bend and the old know
they may not make it, go down
with the power lines sparking,
broken at the trunk. They fling
their branches, forked sacrifice
to the beaten earth. They do not pray.
If they make a sound it’s eaten
by the wind. And though the stars
return they do not offer thanks, only
ooze a sticky sap from their roundish
concentric wounds, clap the water
from their needles, straighten their spines
and breathe, and breathe again.
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incorrigibletenderness · 7 years ago
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incorrigibletenderness · 7 years ago
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Sonnet by Richard Brautigan
The sea is like an old nature poet who died of a heart attack in a public latrine. His ghost still haunts the urinals. At night he can be heard walking around barefooted in the dark. Somebody stole his shoes.
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incorrigibletenderness · 7 years ago
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Manifesto of the Lyric Selfie by Becca Klaver
Our “I”s. They are multiple. We shuffle them often as we like. They can tag us. We can untag ourselves. We’ve got our to-be-looked-at-ness oh we have got it. We peer and cross. Go lazy. We’re all girly. We’re pretty selfie. We write our poems. We write our manifestos. While sitting in the photo booth. While skipping down the street. We think: if only my camera could see me now. There is a tranquil lyric but we recollect emotion with the speed of the feed. We pose to show the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings. There are no more countrysides. There are no more churchyards. We smudge our vistas. We flip the cam around. What is burning in our little hearts? Hashtags of interiority licking like flames. We had been reflective. We have been reflected.
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