April 11, 2011

Anne Coray

LETTER FROM A BROTHER

It is the tailspin of autumn;
we know where this is going.
When I last wrote
I could still stand alone.
The funniest thing
is watching the leaves
which seem uncertain
where to land—
as if it mattered!
Mother frets
about the drip at my window
and can’t fathom the delay
in the Grieg she ordered.
(Lyrische Stucke—
Jesus-Christus-Kirche recording.)
I was thinking the other day of hope,
how like blood it is
leaving for the first time the body,
how it believes in that new color
for a slick moment
before it begins to congeal …
Do you remember that dream I had
cold winter, no snow?
We were looking for a tree
—it must have been Xmas—
to either decorate or burn.
When I swung the ax
we discovered the tree was glass.
Back home, the wind had blown
your votive candles out.
I think I knew then
our bodies are a kind of crystal ash.

Write, if you get a chance.
Love,
Paul

from Rattle #19, Summer 2003

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Anne Coray: “Almost daily I struggle with the meaning of poetry in our market-driven, competitive society. Poetry has the capacity to convey respect for language and care for the world, but who is listening? Certainly not those who have come to view life itself as a commodity.” (website)

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March 9, 2011

Anne Coray

CALL IT LOVE

Even while he lay, stern-browed and static
on the bed, rejecting death
those of us still standing
in the hushed room
saw his arms become more shapely
and the dark hairs starting their undarkening
as moonlight flooded the window
and moved up his body until it touched
the tip of his chin.

Soon we knew she had come a long way
to meet him.
From a long night napless and cold.
Daringly her hips moved on him;
his toes took on her blue chill and curled.
Then the shadows in the hollows
of his face softened, and his breath slowed.

from Rattle #16, Winter 2001

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