Dragonfly: Any of various large insects of the order Odonata or suborder Anisoptera, having a long slender body and two pairs of narrow, net-veined wings that are usually held outstretched while the insect is at rest. Also called regionally darner, darning needle, mosquito fly, mosquito hawk, needle, skeeter hawk.
Poetry: The art or work of a poet.
Prolixity: Excessive wordiness in speech or writing; longwindedness
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Kim Addonizio - New Book & Fabulous Poem
Ms. Addonizio's newest book of poems is "Lucifer At The Starlight".
The First Line is the Deepest
BY KIM ADDONIZIO
I have been one acquainted with the spatula,
the slotted, scuffed, Teflon-coated spatula
that lifts a solitary hamburger from pan to plate,
acquainted with the vibrator known as the Pocket Rocket
and the dildo that goes by Tex,
and I have gone out, a drunken bitch,
in order to ruin
what love I was given,
and also I have measured out
my life in little pills—Zoloft,
Restoril, Celexa,
Xanax.
I have. For I am a poet. And it is my job, my duty
to know wherein lies the beauty
of this degraded body,
or maybe
it's the degradation in the beautiful body,
the ugly me
groping back to my desk to piss
on perfection, to lay my kiss
of mortal confusion
upon the mouth of infinite wisdom.
My kiss says razors and pain, my kiss says
America is charged with the madness
of God. Sundays, too,
the soldiers get up early, and put on their fatigues in the blue-
black day. Black milk. Black gold. Texas tea.
Into the valley of Halliburton rides the infantry—
Why does one month have to be the cruelest,
can't they all be equally cruel? I have seen the best
gamers of your generation, joysticking their M1 tanks through
the sewage-filled streets. Whose
world this is I think I know.
**********************************
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10 comments:
I love her subtle references to other poetry. I guess I'm glad not to be troubled by life too much anymore, but I do miss the passion.
Marion-I really liked this. She sees with very honest eyes and lets it pour not just in the cup, but all over the table to floor. It soaks purely. ~rick
Yes, the references to other poets is what drew me to this one, too, and how she has the balls to say what we think, but don't write down. Most of her poetry is this way, beautifully brutal and honest. I have all of her books except for this new one.
Thanks for stopping by, Rick and Margaret. Love and Blessings!!
Wow....dark. I loved it. Let it rain. I have a hard time appreciating the need to bottle it all up in a pretty sense, when the mess is so much more interesting. Truth is ugly and beauty. Rarely just one or the other I think.
((Hugs))
Any references to Frost are cool with me! What a wonderful poem... thank you so much :)
Also: I want to punch Ted Hughes in the face. For some reason I can explain away any other poet's bad behavior (apparently ee cummings was a mean drunk, Bukowski was, well, Bukowski, Pound was a fairly racist man) but I can't forgive Hughes for taking Plath away for us, just as you noted. Grrrr...
Annie, I'm feelin' the dark today. Look out! LOL! Yes, truth is both brutal and beautiful! Blessings, friend!
Phoenix, don't you just love the way she took the Frost lines and rhythm and put her own words with them? It makes me want to try it. Yes, I do love the bad boy poets myself. Glad we share the same dislikes, though. Ha! Blessings!!
I'm always open to other stuff.... but I still like her 'What Do Women Want' (and that RED dress!!)
I love your picture of Mary she is beautiful. Reminds me of when we were growing up and all said the rosary.
Love Renee xoxo
Kelly, I have to agree that "What Do Woman Want" is my favorite poem of hers. Thanks for stopping by! Blessings!
Renee, thank you. I collect rosaries and I love pictures of Mary. Love, Hugs and Blessings, dearest friend of my heart---
Oh, I like it here so very much. Thank you for the visit to mine and the path that led me here.
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