structureandstyle:
Be strong Bernadette
Nobody will ever know
I came here for a reason
Perhaps there is a life here
Of not being afraid of your own heart beating
Do not be afraid of your own heart beating
Look at very small things with your eyes
& stay warm
Nothing outside can cure you but everything’s outside
There is great shame for the world in knowing
You may have gone this far
Perhaps this is why you love the presence of other people so much
Perhaps this is why you wait so impatiently
You have nothing more to teach
Until there is no more panic at the knowledge of your own real existence
& then only special childish laughter to be shown
& no more lies no more
Not to find you no
More coming back & more returning
Southern journey
Small things & not my own debris
Something to fight against
& we are all very fluent about ourselves
Our own ideas of food, a Wild sauce
There’s not much point in its being over: but we do not speak them:
I had written: “the man who sewed his soles back on his feet”
And then I panicked most at the sound of what the wind could do
to me
if I crawled back to the house, two feet give no position, if
the branches cracked over my head & their threatening me, if I
covered my face with beer & sweated till you returned
If I suffered what else could I do
—Bernadette Mayer
A friend with amazing taste in poetry (e.g. Catie Rosemurgy’s The Stranger Manual) posted this on facebook five days ago. At least four or five reads later, Bernadette Mayer’s words sank in. As I tell my students, if you have trouble understanding poetry, read it aloud and read it again.
Aren’t we all just in Antartica? Aren’t we all just lonely and isolated? But, “Perhaps there is a life here/Of not being afraid of your own heart beating/Do not be afraid of your own heart beating.”
Thanks to the Poetry Foundation for everything they do, including publishing “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” first in Poetry magazine—and keeping this poem on their site.
-R