[identity profile] lonelybusiness.livejournal.com
Descending Theology: The Crucifixion
--Mary Karr

To be crucified is first to lie down
on a shaved tree, and then to have oafs stretch you out
on a crossbar as if for flight, then thick spikes
      fix you into place.

Once the cross pops up and the pole stob
sinks vertically in an earth hole perhaps
at an awkward list, what then can you blame for hurt
      but your own self's burden?

You're not the figurehead on a ship. You're not
flying anywhere, and no one's coming to hug you.
You hang like that, a sack of flesh with the hard
      trinity of nails holding you into place.

Thus hung, your ribcage struggles up
to breathe until you suffocate, give up the ghost.
If God permits this, one wonders how
      this twirling earth

manages to navigate the gravities and star tugs.
Or if some less than loving watcher
watches us scuttle across the boneyard greens
      under which worms

seethe and the front jaws of beetles
eventually clasp toward the flesh of every beloved.
The man on the cross under massed thunderheads feels
      his soul leak away,

then surge. Some windy authority lures him higher
till an unseen tear in the sky's membrane is rent,
and he's streaming light, snatched back, drawn close,
      so all loneliness ends.
[identity profile] jezabel.livejournal.com
In the soapy water our bodies steamed
like newborns still flushed from the womb's caul.
This bath was our farewell ritual: We'd played

Hide the Soap and Tropical Rain Forest.
In the fogged mirror our forms
had merged and come untwined.

The clock ticked down to my dawn flight,
but this time a vow had been spoken,
a bond entered into, unwitnessed

by any assembly but nonetheless
sacred. The ring on my hand shone
with the firmament's starlight. Though candles around us

guttered and the water cooled and each cupped
the other's face with withered hands, our bodies
steamed, our tired souls could not stop rising.


Mary Karr; "Adieu"
Viper Rum
[identity profile] moireach.livejournal.com
Disgraceland
Mary Karr

Before my first communion at 40, I clung
    to doubt as Satan spider-like stalked
        the orb of dark surrounding Eden
            for a wormhole into paradise.

God had first formed me in the womb
    small as a bite of burger.
        Once my lungs were done
            He sailed a soul like a lit arrow

to inflame me. Maybe that piercing
    made me howl at birth,
        or the masked creatures
            whose scalpel cut a lightning bolt to free me—

I was hoisted by the heels and swatted, fed
     and hauled through rooms. Time-lapse photos show
        my fingers grew past crayon outlines,
            my feet came to fill spike heels.

Eventually, I lurched out to kiss the wrong mouths,
    get stewed, and sulk around. Christ always stood
        to one side with a glass of water.
            I swatted the sap away.

When my thirst got great enough
    to ask, a stream welled up inside;
        some jade wave buoyed me forward;
            and I found myself upright

in the instant, with a garden
    inside my own ribs aflourish. There, the arbor leafs.
        The vines push out plump grapes.
            You are loved, someone said. Take that

and eat it.
[identity profile] sparklestarsy.livejournal.com
(Sorry bout the odd formatting...but I had to (attempt to) preformat to keep her indented lines...)

ELEGY FOR A RAIN SALESMAN

Dear friend, I heard tonight by phone
of that ghost bubble in your brain.
It was not the pearl of balance one fits
between lines in a carpenter's level
to make something plumb, but a blip
in a membrane that burst so now
	your fine brain is dead—

that city of mist that nests in your skull
will never again flicker with light.
Flying the red-eye home, I talked to your mom tonight
by air phone. Through static
her voice stayed calm, wondering when
to unhook the hospital's bellows.
	She thought a trip

to the beauty shop would help, and John,
how you'd have cackled at that.
That winter when I was broke
and camped on your sofa for months,
your dusky laugh kept me alive.
Each night in a menthol fog we drank
	till last call.

Once staggering home, we stopped
to crane up between buildings, lines of windows
rising away in rows. We listed in wonder,
leaning together like cartoon drunks. There was
a rectangle of sparkled sky you pointed out—
beauty's tattered flag—we pledged allegiance to—
	mittens over our heaving chests,

& the rest/best... )

Mary Karr
[identity profile] silverflurry.livejournal.com
Who The Meek Are Not
by Mary Karr

Not the bristle-bearded Igors bent
under burlap sacks, not peasants knee-deep
in the rice-paddy muck,
nor the serfs whose quarter-moon sickles
make the wheat fall in waves
they don't get to eat. My friend the Franciscan
nun says we misread
that word meek in the Bible verse that blesses them.
To understand the meek
(she says) picture a great stallion at full gallop
in a meadow, who
at his master's voice seizes up to a stunned
but instant halt.
So with the strain of holding that great power
in check, the muscles
along the arched neck keep eddying,
and only the velvet ears
prick forward, awaiting the next order.

March 2025

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