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Friday, October 20, 2006

Kenyon's Husband

A couple of poems by Donald Hall ...

White Apples

when my father had been dead a week
I woke
with his voice in my ear
I sat up in bed

and held my breath
and stared at the pale closed door

white apples and the taste of stone

if he called again
I would put on my coat and galoshes


Distressed Haiku

In a week or ten days
the snow and ice
will melt from Cemetery Road.

I'm coming! Don't move!

Once again it is April.
Today is the day
we would have been married
twenty-six years.

I finished with April
halfway through March.

You think that their
dying is the worst
thing that could happen.

Then they stay dead.

Will Hall ever write
lines that do anything
but whine and complain?

In April the blue
mountain revises
from white to green.

The Boston Red Sox win
a hundred straight games.
The mouse rips
the throat of the lion

and the dead return.


2 Comments:

Blogger cowboyangel said...

"You think that their
dying is the worst
thing that could happen.

Then they stay dead."

What a powerful, haunting line.

I just missed missed Hall a couple of weeks ago. He was reading at the CUNY Graduate Center the one day of the week I'm there, but I didn't know it until late in the day. Some friends were going. I was just too tired. The thought of missing my train and getting home even later was too much. Comfort over poetry that day.

9:37 AM  
Blogger crystal said...

I like those lines too ... I've never seen any poet, but I guess in New York, there's much more opportunity.

10:38 AM  

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