Thursday, September 22, 2005

Poetry Thursday: Jane Hirshfield


Poem Holding Its Heart in One Fist

by
Jane Hirshfield

Each pebble in this world keeps

its own counsel.

Certain words--these, for instance--
may be keeping a pronoun hidden.
Perhaps the lover's you
or the solipsist's I.
Perhaps the philosopher's willowy it.

The concealment plainly delights.

Even a desk will gather
its clutch of secret, half-crumpled papers,
eased slowly, over years,
behind the backs of drawers.

Olives adrift in the altering brine-bath
etch onto their innermost pits
a few furrowed salts that will never be found by the
tongue.

Yet even with so much withheld,
so much unspoken,
potatoes are cooked with butter and parsley,
and buttons affixed to their sweater.
Invited guests arrive, then dutifully leave.

And this poem, afterward, washes its breasts
with soap and trembling hands, disguising nothing.

[image: Jim Dine, Mask and Heart. Poem via
poetseers]



1 Comments:

Blogger Rarity said...

As with all the poems I read here on your fine blog, I must re-read a few times to GET.IT. I think I finally got this one. And I like it. Instantly I loved the first two lines (why?).

She manages to be far and very close at the same time. I mean I feel the olive pit beeing scrutinized by my own tongue in order to get every last bit of salty flavour, but having to resign - feeling there's still a spot that has eluded me. Then the checking of breasts carefully - with equally strong hopes of NOT finding "it"...

Great!

9/24/2005 01:09:00 PM  

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