But "strong" is the word for Prado's humble honesty in confronting her age, her losses, her gratitude for the small delights of everyday life. Some of the best poems are in the first section with the longest lines, which I'm not going to try and reproduce in this post because I'd want to convey the way they look and read on the page not on my computer screen and its limitations.
But I'll type up two shorter poems with shorter lines so you can see the power of her unique poetic strategy and the ways it serves her subjects so well in this highly recommended collection:
ANOTHER
our own housecat
who has forgotten
the kitten births but years later
mothers me settles where I am
makes sure of me
this cat we call Rose who wants to know
us and now and then in sleep she
with others has spoken clearly
why do they have language
only when we can't remember?
once in the canopy above
the forest we knew each other
everybody knew each other
MY HUSBAND SAYS, "I'LL JUST KEEP DOING IT"
so few experiences now each one then
huge today's is glare off the parking lot
nothing like appalachian murder ballads
or wild orchids but summer glare
does recite the effort of groceries many car
doors opening the drivers shapely in sleeveless
well-fitting tank tops
how huge? I'm writing it down so
it's that huge because it's what I have
for Thursday's blank page
we know everything:
how to dress ourselves
how to choose a ripe avocado
how to raise our hands palms out
to rebuke the useless
3 comments:
I've been a fan since "These Mirrors Prove It."
Lal:
New T-shirt: "Rebuke The Useless"
~ Willy
I hear you Kevin, and Willy, great idea!
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