Poem of the Day
Notebooks
By Elizabeth Bishop
I introduce Penelope Gwin,
A friend of mine through thick and thin,
Who’s travelled much in foreign parts
I introduce Penelope Gwin,
A friend of mine through thick and thin,
Who’s travelled much in foreign parts
How lucky I am tonight to be holding a lantern
at this railroad crossing in the middle of America
and not clinging to a leaky raft on the north Atlantic,
In 1027, not far from Bernburg,
eighteen peasants were seized
by a common delusion.
my boys & I refused to believe it was Michael who didn’t make it through the night even though the cameras strewn across the sky showed the mansion lawn specked with red sirens & from my own covers I imagined him to be simply asleep the way I slept
When the man can’t sleep, he builds
a matchstick replica of Auschwitz
in his basement, working from memory.
most people have absolutely the wrong idea of how to go about cutting a throat, the right way to do it on animals anatomically similar to humans such as dogs, sheep, veal calves and very young pigs—emphatically not on full-grown pigs
I
they have no gathering places
for taking of council nor
agreements
He said: “Straight from the horse’s mouth.”
He said that was straight from the horse’s mouth.
He said it straight from the horse’s mouth.
he saw my mother in the scar-city—
brown hair and yellow dusted-down dress
with lips too cracked to hold down a language
a ghost is hanging
from the doorpost
of our past—
can you see it?
it has wounds—it’s bleeding
years from its mouth