The Do-Over. Kathleen Ossip
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Название: The Do-Over

Автор: Kathleen Ossip

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Зарубежные стихи

Серия:

isbn: 9781936747986

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ to the editors of these journals, which first published some of the poems:

       Boston Review, The Literary Review, Academy of American Poets Poem-A-Day, American Poetry Review, Absent, jubilat, The Awl, Fence, The Atlas Review, Poetry, Court Green, 1913: A Journal of Forms, At Length, MoonLit, A Public Space, Plume, The Hat, StoryQuarterly, TriQuarterly, Magma, The Believer.

      “How can we know the journey from the path?” is for Roddy Lumsden; it was written for his Subterranean Homesick Blues Project reading, which took place in New York on October 30, 2009.

      “Three True Stories” is for David Trinidad.

      “The Millipede” is for Ellen Sauer, Christian Sauer, Muriel Ossip, and Keira DiNuzzo.

      Thank you also to Joelle Biele, Christina Davis, Barbara Fischer, Jenny Goodrich, Joe Harrington, Joe Salvatore, Leah Souffrant, Arthur Vogelsang, and Susan Wheeler for encouragement and advice; to the women of the Poet-moms listserv for wisdom, laughs, and handholding; to Kathleen D. Marshall and the staff at the Sylvia Plath archive in the Lilly Library, Indiana University Bloomington; and to the Corporation of Yaddo and Preston Browning at Wellspring House, where I was given time to write some of the poems. Tons of gratitude to the Sarabande team: Sarah Gorham, Kirby Gann, and Kristen Radtke. Thanks and love to Robert Ossip, Muriel Ossip, Al Ossip, and Philip and Ann DiNuzzo.

       For Andrea Forster Ossip (1944–2008)

      Andy was my stepmother-in-law.

      Dimension means nothing to the senses, and all we are left with is a troubled sense of immensity.

      —Charles Dutton, early Grand Canyon geologist

      Death is not what you think it is; it’s actually what I think it is.

      —Mark Waldron

      Alfresco on a chairbed the woman confirms the natural.

      Natural it is to be disgusted and hopeless.

      Disgusted and hopeless at being related to her,

      Relating to her is what keeps me alive.

      Even the unfair trees and the lawn are alive.

      Alive with beating life she flies in the face of

      Five w’s: what when where why why?

      On the chairbed she is breaking out of the sun and the lawn.

      Really, out of the sun and the lawn and the trees and me. I am

      Still studying, aren’t you? Whether we accept

      These processes or are repulsed by them, we are still studying,

      Each of us one cell in a universe of process.

      Realm of the universe, hers, and realm of the bourgeois dah-dah-dah.

      On the chairbed, in the sun, she’s turning yellow.

      She’s part of the carbon cycle. I toe several pits on the lawn.

      She’s been eating cherries and has dropped pits on the lawn.

      It’s natural to have lost my breath and found several

      Pits on the lawn.

      I had no mother, I required none.

      I believed in mothers like I believed in the pyramids.

      They were complicated too. Monumental but hollow. Dusty but beautiful. Mathematical and confusing. Birth, I believed,

      was the brilliant upheaval. Now I see Death is another.

      When I think of mother,

      you are the image I think of, like a sun. I mean that

      I’m not supposed to make friends in a poem, which should be mathematical and confusing. You are not my mother. I required none. You are a friend who couldn’t help but mother

      and now a mass blocks the sun. I want to take your kindness and put it in my hair.

      The image is dead! Long live the sensation.

      I’m afraid of death

      because it inflates

      the definition

      of what a person

      is, or love, until

      they become the same,

      love, the beloved,

      immaterial.

      I’m afraid of death

      because it invents

      a different kind of

      time, a stopped clock

      that can’t be reset,

      only repurchased,

      an antiquity.

      I’m afraid of death,

      the magician who

      makes vanish and who

      makes odd things appear

      in odd places—your

      name engraves itself

      on a stranger’s chest

      in letters of char.

      I sing of a most beautiful man in a factory in Longhua. Fifteen hours he sails among the never-finished piecework, his voice winding in rhythms and phrase groups, sumptuously so. Through the gold-blue day, through the edgy night, his tempestuous mind, the planes of his face amplify Plato. He returns to the dormitory, solitary among many, which makes him beautiful.

      •

      If I can create the man,

      Beauty can’t redeem

      the iPod nano

      made in a five-story factory

      secured by police officers.

      •

      Or СКАЧАТЬ