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	<title>Dave Jarecki &#187; Bruce Weigl</title>
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		<title>Five Poems by Bruce Weigl</title>
		<link>http://davejarecki.com/creative/2008/bruce-weigl-poems/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Oct 2008 06:03:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dave Jarecki</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bruce Weigl]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Guest writer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bruce Weigl poetry]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Bruce Weigl is the author of fourteen poetry collections and a memoir, and his work has appeared in numerous publications, including The New York Times, The New Yorker, American Poetry Review and Harpers. Weigl has received awards from the American Academy of Poets, and has been the recipient of two Pushcart Prizes, a Patterson Poetry [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Bruce Weigl</strong><em> is the author of fourteen poetry collections and a memoir, and his work has appeared in numerous publications, including </em>The New York Times, The New Yorker, American Poetry Review and Harpers.<em> Weigl has received awards from the American Academy of Poets, and has been the recipient of two Pushcart Prizes, a Patterson Poetry Prize, and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2006, Weigl was awarded the Lannan Literary Award for Poetry. His collection, </em>Song of Napalm<em>, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1988. He currently serves as Distinguished Professor of Arts and Humanities at Lorain County Community College. </em></p>
<p><em>The following poems are from Weigl&#8217;s 2006 collection, </em>Declension in the Village of Chung Luong, <em>published by <a href="http://www.ausablepress.org/" target="_blank">Ausable Press</a>. They are featured here with the poet&#8217;s permission.</em> </p>
<p><strong>The Stakes as Hands</strong></p>
<p>The stakes that the surveyors laid to mark the boundaries<br />
of my land still stand above the drifted snow, as if someone<br />
outstretched a hand to strangers who may pass my house.<br />
Another war is waiting on the line to start; so many<br />
we will send to die, and tonight<br />
the snow is general all through the city:<br />
an almost vast unfolding into tundras of our loneliness.<br />
Yet it&#8217;s only snow. The stakes are stakes, not hands that reach<br />
to strangers who may pass my house or not.</p>
<p><strong>In Love with Easeful Death</strong></p>
<p>That was just now a spirit;<br />
a flicker and then gone<br />
into the dusk of trees at the edge of the party<br />
I can no longer bear witness to.<br />
In the small pond with its faux waterfall and changing<br />
colored lights,<br />
I feed the imported fish into boredom.<br />
That was surely a humming bird,<br />
flit of color and then vanished into the trees.<br />
I don&#8217;t ask anymore what&#8217;s real, and I told no one<br />
about the absolutely white rabbit<br />
I watched hop through my vision at the Shawmut T-stop<br />
in Dorchester one midnight, I told no one,<br />
but I caught myself wondering,<br />
and then I stopped.</p>
<p><strong>This No Where</strong></p>
<p>This is just a picture we live inside,<br />
white house, black shutters<br />
frozen snow on the roof and on the ground.<br />
This is just a movie we imagine is our lives, silent transfers<br />
here and there in our cars, to appointments we must keep<br />
or else die a little in someone&#8217;s estimation; die a little in<br />
someone&#8217;s head. That&#8217;s what I think. That&#8217;s the way I think about it,<br />
and I am only just a little afraid of letting go<br />
completely of knowing anything,<br />
letting go of knowing anything at all,<br />
so I don&#8217;t know why<br />
we fret so over the loss of beauty, over the passing, or over the death<br />
of beauty, but we do. We try to possess beauty with our lying eyes<br />
and think we know what beauty is or does, and it&#8217;s a crying shame<br />
what happens to us then.</p>
<p><strong>Portal</strong></p>
<p>In our hallucination, the children are instructed<br />
in the ways of finding shelter<br />
when the rain of our bombs comes down<br />
on their small villages and schools. The children<br />
can identify our planes, and<br />
what our planes can do to them. They</p>
<p>sleep the sleep of weary warriors<br />
beaten down and left for nothing in their lonely deaths<br />
that come so slowly you would wish<br />
your own heart empty of blood.<br />
I watched the people gather in the street<br />
to stop the war that is the war against ourselves,<br />
against the children who practice finding our planes<br />
before they&#8217;re blown up into dust<br />
nobody sees, but that<br />
makes a sound like the vanquished.</p>
<p><strong>The First Father-Murdered Rabbit</strong></p>
<p>The smell of the rabbit&#8217;s blood in the back of my father&#8217;s<br />
chevy from more than fifty years ago<br />
comes back to me today,<br />
out of a tunnel of some kind<br />
is the best I can do<br />
to explain what I mean. The smell of the rabbit&#8217;s blood<br />
had been inside me all along; (I am most alive<br />
inside of words, and most safe in their aisle of fancy.)<br />
That boy didn&#8217;t have to see the rabbit, pearl of blood<br />
at the tip of its nose,<br />
but he did, and he didn&#8217;t have to help skin the rabbit clean,<br />
but he did that too, at his father&#8217;s side.<br />
You don&#8217;t know at the time<br />
just what it is that you&#8217;re getting yourself into;<br />
just what doors<br />
you may open, and then never come back.</p>
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