Poems for Brigid
The City of Silence
by William Matthews
As far as a sound wave rings out
before it’s heard,
that’s where the city limits are.
I keep the place clean.
Anything you worship
will let you be its priest.
If I open my mouth
a word falls in.
Gods avoid their shrines.
The streets are paved with streets.
Sleep is my radio and all
its news is true.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Then Call It Swimming
by Ellen Bass
you are concerned. your writings
are not poems — there are no line breaks
sentences wind like coils of a pot
they are not stories — no beginning
middle end, characters
are not developed
the action is a child
turning
in green chiffon
you apologize: I
don’t know what to call it
you want a name
then call it swimming. the water passes over you
the smoothness
the liquid
the smoothness more enveloping than making love
your arm, arching in the sun
lit drops, crystals, falling
or call it walking, the air
cold in your nostrils
the ground soft with rotting leaves
the green is too bright
some are mushrooms, some maize
some take long as persimmon to fruit
some leave neatly
they are the black pearl droppings of deer
some are overgrown pups
they hang on your tit, you cannot
shake them off
call it
coming home, returning
by a different route
call it a sandwich in waxed paper
we will give it to our children
call it an antidote
to what we have been taught
call it rubble, what remains
through pyres, altars, ovens, electricity
call it what comes in place of sleep
what we ask to know
a tribute to redwood pods, they
burst within fire, seeding
young groves
February 13th, 2006 at 7:37 pm
Thanks, Anne. The poetry experiment was crazy. I had over 200 emails from everywhere, many links especially from the knitting bloggers in pandora’s circle, and a ton of others from everywhere. I’m so sorry it took so long to find yours. it’s been overwhelming. THank you! Hope you are well.
February 16th, 2006 at 7:37 am
i think i know ellen bass from Vermont days. i loved her poem. -b