[identity profile] gamesiplay.livejournal.com
Death as a German Expert
by Lucie Brock-Broido

The North Star hanging
Like an umlaut over all of us, causes
    (even brittle) me to bend.

The weight of everything, bleak as
    babies in baskets
Rushing down the River Sauer toward
    their celestial misery.

I remember everything: my sister and I
    calling our mother person-
To-person in the afterlife. Always the
    dead will be lined as sad
And crookedly as fingerling potatoes in
    root-cellars dank enough
For overwintering. In Luckenwalde a
    young girl slides a needle

In the turnip-purple soft fold of her
    inner arm and this, too,
Transfigures to a kind of joy. Expertise is
    everything.

Angel, extinguish the tallows of the elder
    trees. (And he does.)
                           Death comes

Like another spotted foal born on the
    barn’s cold floor,
Spindling to stand, and he does.
[identity profile] duathir.livejournal.com

How Can It Be I Am No Longer I

Winter was the ravaging in the scarified
Ghost garden, a freak of letters crossing down a rare

Path bleak with poplars. Only the yew were a crewel
Of kith at the fieldstone wall, annulled

As a dulcimer cinched in a green velvet sack.
To be damaged is to endanger—taut as the stark

Throats of castrati in their choir, lymphless & fawning
& pale. The miraculous conjoining

Where the beamless air harms our self & lung,
Our three-chambered heart & sternum,

Where two made a monstrous
Braid of other, ravishing.

To damage is an animal hunch
& urge, thou fallen—the marvelous much

Is the piece of Pleidaes the underworld calls
The nightsky from their mud & rime. Perennials

Ghost the ground & underground the coffled
Veins, an aneurism of the ice & spectacle.

I would not speak again. How flinching
The world will seem—in the lynch

Of light as I sail home in a winter steeled
For the deaths of the few loved left living I will

Always love. I was a flint
To bliss & barbarous, a bristling

Of tracks like a starfish carved on his inner arm,
A tindering of tissue, a reliquary, twinned.

A singe of salt-hay shrouds the orchard-skin,
That I would be—lukewarm, mammalian, even then,

In winter when moss sheathes every thing alive
& everything not or once alive.

That I would be—dryadic, gothic, fanatic against
The vanishing; I will not speak to you again.

by Lucie Brock-Broido

Carrowmore

Sep. 6th, 2008 12:35 am
[identity profile] lightup-tea.livejournal.com
My new profile page:



All about Carrowmore the lambs
Were blotched blue, belonging.

They were waiting for carnage or
Snuff. This is why they are born

To begin with, to end.
Ruminants do not frighten

At anything--gorge in the soil, butcher
Noise, the mere graze of predators.

All about Carrowmore
The rain quells for three days.

I remember I cold I was, the botched
Job of travelling. And just so.

Wherever I went I came with me.
She buried her bone barrette

In the ground's woolly shaft.
A tear of her hair, an old gift

To the burnt other who went
First. My thick braid, my ornament--

My belonging I
Remember how cold I will be.

--Lucie Brock-Broido

x

And now I must make another shot of espresso and work on my own poems.

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