April is National Poetry Month
Ukiah Library Poem of the Day for National Poetry Month
April 19, 2008
Just As You Said Love
It’s A Death
‘runners using the heart to span the brink of disaster’
Mary Norbert Korte
mark this night carved upon the breast carved
deep into the skin as the scars of some
mediaeval mystic everyone left alone
mark this down into the belly where it
disappears under the shadow that shadow inside
where love dries stiff clotted dries where
madrone blossoms sit like virgins burning
inside a remembering dark this night
carved upon the breast carved
upon the nipples lifed like amaranth
it is the tough the touch that scores
the skin this blossomed flesh the moss rose
lips lying the tongue at those petals
the light dimmed by the body the learning
the night this marked night carved upon the breath
carved into the hollow space where passion sits
thingking with branches growing from it
growing branches that bargain for some light
where the only light is stubs in flames that lick
the air slowly of its breath its breath
carved into thighs the strong swelling
the proud the pulse the seed the great
thrust leaping in the hands into a vortex a vortex of
bent trees ghost cries amaranth moss rose amaranth
just so love it’s a death a drawing out of life
fine as silt through spread hands fine as fire
this cold spring dried fine and rooted with pain
a world gathered against the skin a world
heaving and backing about the breast covered
with moss rose with coral root with amaranth amaranth
the breast all covered and carved with holy saving this night
set rivers in stone tumbling and pushing to the sea
Sanctuary Station
28 May 1977
Willits Library National Poetry Month Poem of the Day April 19, 2008
Poem for the 1st Passover Seder
MARGE PIERCY
Matzoh
Flat you are as a door mat
and as homely.
No crust, no glaze, you lack
a cosmetic glow.
You break with a snap.
You are dry as a twig
split from an oak
in midwinter.
You are bumpy as a mud basin
in a drought.
Square as a slab of pavement,
you have no inside
to hide raisins or seeds.
You are pale as the full moon
pocked with craters.
What we see is what we get,
honest, plain, dry
shining with nostalgia
as if baked with light
instead of heat.
The bread of flight and haste
in the mouth you
promise, home
Labels: 2008, April 19, Just as you said love it's a death, Marge Pierce, mary norbert korte, Poem for 1st Passover Seder, Ukiah Library, Willits Library
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