From “Why Not Say What Happens?”
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VI
Screaming -- those who could
sprinting -- south toward
Battery Park, the dark cloud
funneling slowly --
there are two things you should know
about this cloud --
one, it isn’t only ash and soot
but metal, glass, concrete, and flesh,
and, two, soon
any one of these pieces
of metal, glass, or concrete
might go through you.
As she turns to run, a woman’s bag
comes off her shoulder,
bright silver compact discs sent
spinning along the ground, a man,
older, to the right,
is tripping,
falls against the pavement,
glasses flying
off his face.
*
VII
Have I mentioned my grandmother,
my father’s mother, who died long ago
but who visits me in dreams?
It’s to her, mostly, I owe
the feeling that, in cases of need,
those transfigured in eternal love help us
certainly with eternal,
and, perhaps, also, with temporal gifts;
that, in eternal love, all is gratis --
all that comes from eternal love
is gratis.
*
-- “I couldn’t write about it at first, not in poetry,” Lawrence Joseph has said about the Sept. 11 terror attacks. But with the publication this month of “Into It: Poems” (Farrar, Straus & Giroux: 68 pp., $20), he presents his response in a variety of poems that, as he explains, “press back against the pressures of our changing realities. Before 9/11, those realities often included the realities of downtown Manhattan. That reality now includes not only my own personal experience of 9/11, but our collective experience as well.”
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