| | | | Gone by Lia Purpura It's that, when I'm gone, (and right off this is tricky) I won't be worried about being gone. I won't be here to miss anything. I want now, sure, all I've been gathering since I was born, but later when I no longer have it, (which might be a state everlasting, who knows?) this moment right now (stand closer, love, you can't be too close), is not a thing I'll know to miss. I doubt I'll miss it. I can't get over this. Copyright © 2013 by Lia Purpura. Used with permission of the author. |
About This Poem "The traditional fearsomeness of death (at least when thinking about my own) comes bearing a paradox that's been palpable to me (and slippery) since childhood. Visually, I guess the paradox would look like a moebius strip, the inside twisting around to become outside...I was finally able to slow it down enough to catch the sensation and pace it out and tack some words to it. The writing of the poem doesn't drive out the fear, but at least makes some space for the consistent surprise of the thought to land."
--Lia Purpura |
| | Most Recent Book by Purpura
(Alice James Books, 2008)
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| Poem-A-Day Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-A-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends. Browse the Poem-A-Day Archive. |
| | | Lia Purpura is the author of seven collections of poems, essays, and translations, including King Baby (Alice James Books, 2008). She is Writer in Residence at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, and on the faculty of the Rainier Writing Workshop. She lives in Baltimore, Maryland. Purpura will be on a panel titled "The Poetic Impulse" at the Academy's Poets Forum in New York City, October 24-26.
| | Related Poems by Maggie Anderson by Christina Rossetti by Mark Doty |
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