Homework Assistance
 Your teacher given you an impossible task? In search of divine inspiration to help you along? 

eMule -> The Poetry Archive -> Forums -> Homework Assistance


Goto Thread: PreviousNext
Goto: Forum ListMessage ListNew TopicSearchLog In
Does anyone know who wrote these poems
Posted by: L michelle (---.proxy.aol.com)
Date: February 20, 2005 11:41PM

I am trying to find out who wrote these poems..they're al by the same author......and if it was modern or realism...thanks so much for any ideas!


FIRST POEM

Pigeons

Smog-grey they travel to and from the “s”

above a nearly nameless corner store

bearing human scraps to furnish a nest.

Below, teh waste of pigeons covers the door.

The sign reads only “d” and “r” apart

from that “s.” No one remembers what it means.

As air further thickens from passing cars,

these birds, unnoticed, weave their way between

shoes on the move, eat what they can of fallen fries,

and pick at cigarette butts. Some hags toss

stale bread, and so they live. When they die,

Pigeons fall into littered corners. Their loss

does not affect those streets: clouds still rain

dirty water; hobos request loose change.



SECOND POEM

Cursing the Darkness & What’s It To You


A lot of trains come through this town all night,

and the kids are experimenting

with expressions again. As in how things are,

or are manifest--and what things do--for the first time

in the history of the world. It’s almost comforting.



And we’re popping the old antibiotics again.

The clanging of a lot of trains continues for some time,

as Tad and Nancy practice for the rest of their lives.

You look big and strong, says Nancy.

You have expressive eyes, says Tad.



They’ve great testimonials. They’ve wonderful,

bright smiles. It’s important we remain clear

on this, how sometimes it’s just train after train

after train. Cyclical even, as the pipes freeze.

And with the weeds making for the window box,



where somehow it’s all gone terribly wrong.

Maybe some crucial details somewhere.

And we wanted each other to have more than that.

So many things, really. While all night

the lights blink, and the crossbars go up and down.



THIRD POEM

October


and the room smells more and more

like something sweet


going slowly rotten. Mornings they arrive

as a unit, wait alongside the building and scream

every profanity they can think of


into each other’s faces. It is a great purging.

The bell rings and, silent, they file in, a veritable


line of monks. O god I pray, O god

of the single file line I pray. And always,

always someone needs something


almost immediately.


FOURTH POEM

Rope


Who was it who first believed

each strand of our experience

is coiled into the long ropes

of the brain, that no matter

how many dawns break their waves

of light over the eye, we manage

to hoard it, all of it, and if

only we could wire some charge

into the right place, we are there,

born across the frightened

sheets of a mother’s blood,

entire, having broken the water

of our denial, without the current

sweetness of memory and loss;

and to test our faith, we will live

our whole lives over, and burn

both ends of this fuse to the center,

remembering and not remembering,

and bearing in mind the difference,

and not bearing, until we come

to the moment the wire dreams

its own descent, that little

charge of pure illusion,

and its laying down of ropes--

who can blame us after all--

in the phantom ropes we are, we are.


Re: Does anyone know who wrote these poems
Posted by: Hugh Clary (---.denver-03rh15rt.co.dial-access.att.net)
Date: February 21, 2005 01:37PM

Oh, sorry, I thought you were looking for analyses. Surely the author is your instructor? The speakers appear to me to be both school teachers and females.




Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.
This poetry forum at emule.com powered by Phorum.