JillSusan.Com
I believe because it is absurd


Two Poems
Previous Entry :: Next Entry

Read/Post Comments (0)
Share on Facebook
To a Terrorist, by Stephen Dunn

    For the historical ache, the ache passed down
    which finds its circumstance and becomes
    the present ache, I offer this poem

    without hope, knowing there's nothing,
    not even revenge, which alleviates
    a life like yours. I offer it as one

    might offer his father's ashes
    to the wind, a gesture
    when there's nothing else to do.

    Still, I must say to you:
    I hate your good reasons.
    I hate the hatefulness that makes you fall

    in love with death, your own included.
    Perhaps you're hating me now,
    I who own my own house

    and live in a country so muscular,
    so smug, it thinks its terror is meant
    only to mean well, and to protect.

    Christ turned his singular cheek,
    one man's holiness another's absurdity.
    Like you, the rest of us obey the sting,

    the surge. I'm just speaking out loud
    to cancel my silence. Consider it an old impulse,
    doomed to become mere words.

    The first poet probably spoke to thunder
    and, for a while, believed
    thunder had an ear and a choice.


September Twelfth, 2001, by X.J. Kennedy

    Two caught on film who hurtle
    from the eighty-second floor,
    choosing between a fireball
    and to jump holding hands,

    aren't us. I wake beside you,
    stretch, scratch, taste the air,
    the incredible joy of coffee
    and the morning light.

    Alive, we open eyelids
    on our pitiful share of time,
    we bubbles rising and bursting
    in a boiling pot.


Read/Post Comments (0)

Previous Entry :: Next Entry

Back to Top

Powered by JournalScape © 2001-2010 JournalScape.com. All rights reserved.
All content rights reserved by the author.
custsupport@journalscape.com