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Gratefulness
When I am asked how I began writing poems, I talk about the indifference of nature.
It was soon after my mother died, a brilliant June day, everything blooming.
I sat on a gray stone bench in a lovingly planted garden, but the day lilies were as deaf as the ears of drunken sleepers and the roses curved inward. Nothing was black or broken and not a leaf fell and the sun blared endless commercials for summer holidays.
I sat on a gray stone bench ringed with the ingenue faces of pink and white impatiens and placed my grief in the mouth of language, the only thing that would grieve with me.
From Alive Together: New and Selected Poems. Copyright © 1996 by Lisel Mueller. Reprinted by kind permission of Louisiana State University Press.
Beloved, you know who I’m calling to, though I mistake you for the bird’s song,…
This was a day when nothing happened, the children went off to school without a…
You darken as my knife slices blushing at what you become. I save your thick…
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