Don't Flinch | Adrienne Rich | Granta Magazine

Don’t Flinch

Adrienne Rich

Lichen-green lines of shingle pulsate and waver
when you lift your eyes. It’s the glare. Don’t flinch
The news you were reading
(who tramples whom) is antique
and on the death pages you’ve seen already
worms doing their normal work
on the life that was: the chewers chewing
at a sensuality that wrestled doom
an anger steeped in love they can’t
even taste. How could this still
shock or sicken you? Friends go missing, mute
nameless. Toss
the paper. Reach again
for the Iliad. The lines
pulse into sense. Turn up the music
Now do you hear it? can you smell smoke
under the near shingles?

 

Photograph © judy_and_ed

Adrienne Rich

Adrienne Rich is the recipient of a Lannan Lifetime Achievement Award, the National Book Award, a MacArthur Fellowship and a 2012 Griffin Poetry Prize Lifetime Recognition Award. Her most recent collection is Tonight No Poetry Will Serve: Poems 2007-2010.

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