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Bars Fight by Lucy Terry Prince
Bars Fight by Lucy Terry Prince August, twas the twenty-fifth, Seventeen houndred forty-six, The Indians did in ambush lay, Some very valiant men to slay Twas nigh unto Sam Dickinson's mill, The Indians there five men did kill. The names of whom I'll not leave out, Samuel Allen like a hero foute, And though he was so brave and bold, His face no more shall we behold. Eleazer Hawks was killed outright, Before he had time to fight, Before he did the Indians see, Was shot and ki

marychristinedelea
Nov 303 min read


Duplex by Jericho Brown
Duplex by Jericho Brown A poem is a gesture toward home.
It makes dark demands I call my own. Memory makes demands darker than my own:
My last love drove a burgundy car. My first love drove a burgundy car.
He was fast and awful, tall as my father. Steadfast and awful, my tall father
Hit hard as a hailstorm. He’d leave marks. Light rain hits easy but leaves its own mark
Like the sound of a mother weeping ag

marychristinedelea
Nov 263 min read


The Carousel by G.C. Oden
The Carousel by G.C. Oden I turned from side to side, from image to image to put you down.—Louise Bogan An empty carousel in a deserted park rides me round and round, ’forth and back, from end to beginning, like the tail that drives the dog. I cannot see: sight focusses shadow where once pleased scenery, and in this whirl of space only the indefinite is constant. This is the way of grief: spinning in the rhythm of memories that will not let you up or down, but keeps you grin

marychristinedelea
Nov 232 min read


In the Dream by Natalie Korman
In the Dream by Natalie Korman Everything seems whole and completely formed. Like a Hollywood movie, you don’t know what they leave out. It looks like it’s all there on the screen. Charismatic performers, fire, time travel, celebrity, humiliation, glory. Some of them are classics: I have to take a test I have not studied for. Or the house I grew up in has been bulldozed. The dead visit me with notable frequency. Sometimes I am in control and mostly I am not. I am naked and

marychristinedelea
Nov 193 min read


Etymological Dirge by Heather McHugh
Etymological Dirge by Heather McHugh 'Twas grace that taught my heart to fear. Calm comes from burning. Tall comes from fast. Comely doesn't come from come. Person comes from mask. The kin of charity is whore, the root of charity is dear. Incentive has its source in song and winning in the sufferer. Afford yourself what you can carry out. A coward and a coda share a word. We get our ugliness from fear. We get our danger from the lord. I cannot believe that

marychristinedelea
Nov 163 min read


Two Tanka by Jun Fujita
November by Jun Fujita On a pale sandhill A bare tree stands; The death-wind Has snatched the last few leaves. A Leaf by Jun Fujita The November sky without a star Droops low over the midnight street; On the pale pavement, cautiously A leaf moves. These poems appeared in the June 1921 issue of Poetry . From the Academy of American Poets: " The tanka is a thirty-one-syllable poem, traditionally written in a single unbroken line. A form of waka , Japanese song or verse, tank

marychristinedelea
Nov 122 min read


Lessons by Pat Schneider
Lessons by Pat Schneider I have learned that life goes on, or doesn't. That days are measured out in tiny increments as a woman in a kitchen measures teaspoons of cinnamon, vanilla, or half a cup of sugar into a bowl. I have learned
that moments are as precious as nutmeg,
and it has occurred to me
that busy interruptions
are like tiny grain moths,
or mice.
They nibble, pee, and poop,
or make their little worms and webs
until you have to throw out the good stuff
with

marychristinedelea
Nov 93 min read


Harlan County, USA (2019) by Pauletta Hansel
Harlan County, USA (2019) by Pauletta Hansel Maybe it is a revelation to you, but miners know how to stop a train. Maybe you think that love of coal means love of the company. Let me tell you what we love about coal. It’s the paycheck. The one we don’t have. It’s the food that’s not on the table, the new backpack that won’t be on his back, my boy’s first day of school. The doctor his granny won’t be seeing for her heart. Remember, we’re used to the dark. We can see inside yo

marychristinedelea
Nov 53 min read


Dancing with Poets by Ellen Bryant Voight
Dancing with Poets by Ellen Bryant Voight "The accident" is what he calls the time he threw himself from a window four floors up, breaking his back and both ankles, so that walking became the direst labor for this man who takes my hand, invites me to the empty strip of floor that fronts the instruments, a length of polished wood the shape of a grave. Unsuited for this world-- his body bears the marks of it, his hand is tense with effort and with shame, and I shy away from an

marychristinedelea
Nov 24 min read
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