Dorianne Laux is a favorite poet of mine, and an even stellar human being. Thanking this universe for having her. Thanking you for reading this.
Savages
Those two shelves, down there.
--Adrienne Rich
They buy poetry like gang members
buy guns -- for aperture, caliber,
heft and defense. They sit on the floor
in the stacks, thumbing through Keats
and Plath, Levine and Olds, four boys
in a bookstore, black glasses, brackish hair,
rumpled shirts from the bin at St. Vincent de Paul.
One slides a warped hardback
from the bottom shelf, the others
scoot over to check the dates,
the yellowed sheaves ride smooth
under their fingers.
One reads a stanza in a whisper,
another turns the page, and their heads
almost touch, temple to temple -- toughs
in a huddle, barbarians before a hunt, kids
hiding in an alley while sirens spiral by.
When they finish reading one closes
the musty cover like the door
on Tutankhamen's tomb. They are savage
for knowledge, for beauty and truth.
They crawl on their knees to find it.
--Dorianne Laux, from "Facts About the Moon"
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2 comments:
I loved those lines at the end:
"When they finish reading one closes the musty cover like the door on Tutankhamen's tomb."
Love that visual.
And also...
"They are savage for knowledge..."
Love the word savage in that context.
#2
glad you enjoyed. amusing to have you back.
tell me a truth. in the need for one these days.
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