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Friday, April 23, 2010

Day 23: NJ/National Poetry Month with Gerald Stern's memories of a wild and merciful God...



In all these rotten shops, in all this broken furniture


and wrinkled ties and baseball trophies and coffee pots

I have never seen a post-war Philco

with the automatic eye

nor heard Ravel's "Bolero" the way I did

in 1945 in that tiny living room

on Beechwood Boulevard, nor danced as I did

then, my knives all flashing, my hair all streaming,

my mother red with laughter, my father cupping

his left hand under his armpit, doing the dance

of old Ukraine, the sound of his skin half drum,

half fart, the world at last a meadow,

the three of us whirling and singing, the three of us

screaming and falling, as if we were dying,

as if we could never stop--in 1945--

in Pittsburgh, beautiful filthy Pittsburgh, home

of the evil Mellons, 5,000 miles away

from the other dancing--in Poland and Germany--

oh God of mercy, oh wild God.

...The Dancing by Gerald Stern, Lambertville
 
That spinning dance, similar to the pleasure and pain of Roethke's and his papa's waltz.  Beautiful, filthy Pittsburgh, like "foul, fetid, fuming, foggy, filthy Philadelphia" in the musical.  The whirling of all the simultaneous activity on this spinning sphere.
 
Happy Shakespeare's birthday.
 
Keep reading and writing,
 
Maureen

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