ALL SOULS
Pallid, thin skinned
potatoes bunchedlike grapes
on yellow stems.
*
I can’t remember
my motheror
This is not the mother
I remember. *
When asked
if she’s frightened,the raped child
whispersthat she is afraid
of ghosts. FUNCTIONS
1
We inquire about heaven
as we mightabout a nursing home.
Will I get email there?
Will I have insights
and someone
to be pleased with them?Will that person
be faking it?Will she be under orders?
Will my words
seem foreign? 2
“Twee, twee!”
some sound insists. LIVE THROUGH
1
Fairy tales enchant the cast-off
one
cut outof the third person.
2
You watch the storm
bear down on youon television.
“I hope I never
have to livethrough this
again.”
3
Find Nemo
in the seaof bodies,
ooze and muscle,little flick-tail.
The remote
is for later,as I often
tell myself. *
Is it possible to speak
of ruleswithout picturing
the mouth of God?
He said, “You must go
everywhereand you should take
the shortcut.”The angels responded
at once,as one?
Thus they are known
as messengers -though they bring
nothing but their gowns.
The rest of us
stand still,flummoxed
by the hostility
of pronouns[note. Armantrout’s most recent book-length publication was Money Shot, published last year by Wesleyan University Press. An earlier collection, Versed (2009), received both a Pulitzer Prize & a National Book Critics Circle Award, while her connection to the most innovative side of American & world poetry remains as strong as ever. Previous postings on Poems & Poetics can be found here & here, as well as Marjorie Perloff’s essay “An Afterword for Rae Armantrout.” (J.R.)]
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