By the American Shore by Robert Kelly
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I want to find a house
I have never lived in
on a beach not frequently
visited. I want a wave
that never crested before,
I want a door
entered only by people
who dont understand me
and I dont understand.
The wallpaper should be green
and the fireplace burn coal.
The women on sofas cross
their legs at the angle and go
in summer to mountain relatives.
The men have little to say
Give me a glass of water
from that clean sink and one
slice of tomato from the fridge
and turn down the Shaker quilt.
Then then I will have lived.
Stamford
From “Not This Island Music” (Black Sparrow: $20, hardcover; $9, paperback; 184 pp.). Kelly, author of many volumes of poetry, won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for poetry with his 1979 “Kill the Messenger Who Brings Bad News.” This newest volume opens with a note to the reader: “My dear, my favorite person, for you all my life is work and all my work is play and you can read me or look away. Such power you have, to comand me so, and such beauty, that to you I would over and over pour out everything I think, everything I can hear, everything I hear the words whisper, every sound I can steal. Truly you are my mother, for who else could I talk to in such confidence of being well heard? All the beauty I know is what I find in you, or let you find. You are my father and my love and my child, and I am nothing without you.” 1987, Robert Kelly, by permission.
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