26 by Rachel Eliza Griffiths Your names toll in my dreams. I pick up tinsel in the street. A nameless god streaks my hand with blood. I look at the lighted trees in windows & the spindles of pine tremble in warm rooms. The flesh of home, silent. How quiet the bells of heaven must be, cold with stars who connot rhyme their brilliance to our weapons. What rouses our lives each moment? Nothing but life dares dying. My memory, another obituary. My memory is a cross. Face down. A whistle in high grass. A shadow pouring down the sill of calamity. Your names wake me in the nearly dark hour. The candles in our windows flicker where your faces peer in, ask us questions light cannot answer. |
|
Copyright © 2013 by Rachel Eliza Griffiths. Used with permission of the author. |
About this Poem: "The imagery and language of the gun in the American memory must be buried. There is so much more to hold up, more to praise. This elegy is for all of us, because we all need to remember how to live in ways that reassert our humanity. This is one of the most literal poems I've ever written and it is like, as so much is in the times we live, an unanswerable flare, a cry for change." Rachel Eliza Griffiths |
Poetry by Griffiths Mule & Pear |
Thanks for being a part of the Academy of American Poets community. To learn about other programs, including National Poetry Month, Poem in Your Pocket Day, the annual Poets Forum, and more, visit Poets.org. |
0 comments:
Post a Comment