Poem of the Week, by Albert Goldbarth

My new novel, Telephone of the Tree, comes out on May 7. Click here for more information. 

A few days ago, my family and I rented kayaks in the Florida Panhandle and paddled up and down the Wakulla River. We saw manatees and giant turtles. Alligators and herons. Anhingas and swift schools of fish. Ancient cypress keeping watch along the banks of the rivers, their roots like enormous toes gripping the sand.

I’ve loved manatees since I first saw them in my early twenties, on the intracoastal waterway. They feel like harbingers of another time, another world, in which the only goal is to be at peace in the water. At one point in the afternoon I floated right over an enormous manatee longer than my kayak. I held my paddle in the air and stayed silent, hoping not to disturb it.

Forces, by Albert Goldbarth

It’s different for the spiderweb: 
the only architecture 
in a five-block radius not 
undone by yesterday’s tornado. 

Out at the More-4-Less, strands 
of uncooked spaghetti were driven, 
unbroken, like nails, through concrete. 
Different levels: different forces. 

I remember when Anna told me 
about the deep-sea dive that almost 
killed her, hammered and disoriented 
and tossed like debris in the middle 

of two converging vectors of power. 
That’s what she said. The whales 
only knew they were singing 
to each other. 

Click here for more information on Albert Goldbarth. I’m unable to find where today’s poem was first published – my apologies.

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Poem of the Week, by Albert Goldbarth

21034365_1822136601133837_3288638729780497471_nHurricanes and earthquakes and floods and the ongoing human cruelty inflicted by our elected employees against their fellow human beings. Jeez. It’s enough to make me understand (a tiny bit, anyway) why religious people start tossing around terms like “the end times.” Screw that, though. Enough good people determined to make the world better will do just that. Let us be like the whales in this strange and unforgettable poem by Albert Goldbarth, and sing to each other.

 

Forces, by Albert Goldbarth

It’s different for the spiderweb: 
the only architecture 
in a five-block radius not 
undone by yesterday’s tornado. 

Out at the More-4-Less, strands 
of uncooked spaghetti were driven, 
unbroken, like nails, through concrete. 
Different levels: different forces. 

I remember when Anna told me 
about the deep-sea dive that almost 
killed her, hammered and disoriented 
and tossed like debris in the middle 

of two converging vectors of power. 
That’s what she said. The whales 
only knew they were singing 
to each other. 

 

 

​For more information on Albert Goldbarth, please ​click here.

Poem of the Week (excerpt), by Albert Goldbarth

Liquid (excerpt from)
– Albert Goldbarth

“All told, the moon’s water—locked away in rocks
under the surface—equals “about two and a half times
the volume of the great lakes.”

                         —The Week, July 2-9, 2010

What other things, what other conditions, are locked away
improbably in rock—in an inhuman hardness?
Moses … doesn’t the story go he smote
a rock in the wilderness with his staff and, lo,
therefrom the waters poured? And Mrs. Sommerson,
the Great Stone Face my mother called her,
regent of the Eighth-Grade Algebra Kingdom, she
who pity’s violin strings couldn’t move a quarter inch
from her unyielding scowl and decimal-pointed grade book …
when one evening I was late in leaving,
and quietly making my passage
down those eerily untenanted halls, I saw
her home room door was opened just enough to show her
at her desk, in tears, her head held in her hands
with such an autonomous weight, she cradled it
as if trying to rock into comfort a terrorized infant.


For more information about Albert Goldbarth, please click here: http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/1295

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