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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
POSTPARTUM BLUES, by ELTON GLASER First Line: Soon the glass angel must be Subject(s): Blues (mood); Music & Musicians | |||
Soon the glass angel must be Wrapped and packed and put away, And this hard year swept out Like tinsel from the Christmas tree- The end of December, aromatic In its homely smoke, and the thin limbs Of maple and ash, the pipecleaner pines, Brushing themselves against The cold carbons of evening. I've watched the ice turn Little knifeblades in the grass. Sly beneath them, the mole Knows what to do with dirt- Shoulder it aside, crumb by claw, And build a city deep, A labyrinth of dark Under the stone and the root. I think I could live there. I think I could make A music of my own. Thinking Makes a music of its own. You can hear it when Some stray phrase stumbles down The rabbit hole, a few words That broke from the brain And won't go back, always One step ahead of the real. But what's in the way To the way in? God, That desperate explanation, Mentor and tormentor, giving us The duties of paradise, Obligations of the saved? And is my way in This abyss of the belly, where they Tied the first knot in my life? Even the virgin must have felt The postpartum blues, crazy enough To pin sweet curls in her hair, Shavings she picked up from The floor of the carpenter's shop. I think I can still hear The baby wailing. Or is that cry The dead beating on their graves For the earth to open- And to let them out, or to let us in? Copyright © 2000 by The Modern Poetry Association. This poem appears in the December 2000 issue of Poetry Magazine. http://www.poetrymagazine.ord | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LINER NOTES TO AN IMAGINARY PLAYLIST by TERRANCE HAYES VARIATIONS: 13 by CONRAD AIKEN BELIEVE, BELIEVE by BOB KAUFMAN ROUND ABOUT MIDNIGHT by BOB KAUFMAN MUSIC by CHARLOTTE FISKE BATES THE POWER OF MUSIC by CHARLOTTE FISKE BATES ON FIRST ENTERING WESTMINSTER ABBEY by LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY IN TIME OF 'THE BREAKING OF NATIONS' by THOMAS HARDY SING-SONG; A NURSERY RHYME BOOK: 110 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI |
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