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Bruce Smith TWO POEMS |
SONG WITH GLORIOSA LILY I know how long a moment is, she told him
in a New York minute, a heartbeat, the famous turning
of two or three seconds
the proof was Mozart or Coltrane. Time a need
what satisfies the intervals, the other end of the
song you remembered you were in the middle of
a voice, a body in its moment of nap and dream:
two of three seconds worth of other light, the open
and shut case of sex—an age in an instant, a time between
the tadpole and the soul
time changed its signature
on the way home from the funeral
up tempo to flay the flagging spirit
to make the most graceful ruckus possible
__ 86 IS NOW 84 It's late in the time of Reagan
the signs at Hartford point to our diminishment, everything
reduced by two—86 is now 84, two bricks shy
so no one knows. The moon overruns the soft shoulders
trickle down theory of November. It's tar bar and can't see
in the American territories of Ives and Stevens and Twain
now there's a manly land. Demur or delirious light in which
Connecticut congratulates itself. The illusion's pastoral—the outside
tucked and fretted and possessed, the inside rosewood harmonium
shadow and synecdoche. Heartbeat and hyperbole. Nighttime
is Einstein and Eisenhower on a radio talk show, light matters
Is there nothin' I can say, is there nothin' I can do
to change your mind, I'm so in love witchyoo
unconsoled white men singing Emotional Rescue. The road holds
me in its blasted democratic arms and rocks me until
I give up, give in. The road has my pulse and my permission
to move me and keep me still. Some time
expended, two gallons less, two less eternity teeth
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