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For my Advanced Poetry Workshop, we have to recite three poems by memory. I've recited "The Truth the Dead Know" by Anne Sexton and section II of Adrienne Rich's "Twenty-One Love Poems." Now, I'm looking for a poem by a male, something on a completely different spectrum. I want to stay away from the likes of "typical" poets: such as Frost, Whitman, Bukowski, cummings... Any suggestions as to poems (at least 16 lines long) or poets? Thanks.
[Your Name Here]
Suppose your name is the punch line to a joke.
Say it’s a variation on the man who walks
into a bar. Or the chicken crossing the road.
Or both: A man walks into a bar with his
jaywalking chicken. . . . Pretend the joke’s told
at a party in a mansion perched on a green hill.
There’s champagne, tuxedoed waiters
balancing trays of hors d'oeuvres, an ice sculpture
of a swan sweating on a white tablecloth.
That kind of party. Those kind of people.
That kind of host who throws that kind
of party attended by those kind of people.
It’s not your crowd or mine but somehow
we both received the invitation in the mailbox,
our names beautifully looped on the envelope
like the iron balustrade of the staircase
twisting up three stories. While telling the joke
the host is haloed by guests, smoke looping
from the Cuban he waves in his fingers.
The room quiets, everyone can hear the gag
which puts one of your imperfections
under a magnifying glass. If David Hernandez
was the punch line, the host would be going on
and on about someone going bald: curlicues
on a pillowcase, the scalp’s slow striptease,
one strand after another falling like tickertape.
But this joke’s about you. This flaw, your flaw.
And it’s your name which nails you to the spiral
staircase where you’ve been standing all this time,
listening: a lone knot on a strand of DNA.
- David Hernandez
[Your Name Here]
Suppose your name is the punch line to a joke.
Say it’s a variation on the man who walks
into a bar. Or the chicken crossing the road.
Or both: A man walks into a bar with his
jaywalking chicken. . . . Pretend the joke’s told
at a party in a mansion perched on a green hill.
There’s champagne, tuxedoed waiters
balancing trays of hors d'oeuvres, an ice sculpture
of a swan sweating on a white tablecloth.
That kind of party. Those kind of people.
That kind of host who throws that kind
of party attended by those kind of people.
It’s not your crowd or mine but somehow
we both received the invitation in the mailbox,
our names beautifully looped on the envelope
like the iron balustrade of the staircase
twisting up three stories. While telling the joke
the host is haloed by guests, smoke looping
from the Cuban he waves in his fingers.
The room quiets, everyone can hear the gag
which puts one of your imperfections
under a magnifying glass. If David Hernandez
was the punch line, the host would be going on
and on about someone going bald: curlicues
on a pillowcase, the scalp’s slow striptease,
one strand after another falling like tickertape.
But this joke’s about you. This flaw, your flaw.
And it’s your name which nails you to the spiral
staircase where you’ve been standing all this time,
listening: a lone knot on a strand of DNA.
- David Hernandez