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Sample Poems from Lee Robinson’s Hearsay
Hear Garrison Keillor of NPR's Writer's Almanac read poems from Hearsay (September 2004 / October 2004) The Rules of Evidence What you want to say most is inadmissible. Say it anyway. Say it again. What they tell you is irrelevant can’t be denied and will eventually be heard. Every question is a leading question. Ask it anyway, then expect what you won’t get. There is no such thing as the original so you’ll have to make do with a reasonable facsimile. The history of the world is hearsay. Hear it. The whole truth is unspeakable and nothing but the truth is a lie. I swear this. My oath is a kiss. I swear by everything incredible. Deliverance There’s no such thing as the necessary poem; that’s what saves poetry from a life like ours, from desire and striving. That is not to say a poem can’t yearn for something it isn’t yet, can’t crave a meal of only apricots or want a one-way ticket to another country. It can. We know how a poem can need so much it turns to mush, and how sometimes even out of mud and mildew rise the most fantastic flowers. No, what I mean is different. That the poem is redeemed by indifference, that before it’s written, the world does very well without it. Therefore it is free to be what it wants to be or not to be at all. That’s its deliverance, its saving grace, and why when it decides to speak we listen to a language that is ours, but so unlike us. A Dream of Horses In the dark they left the barn together, the old gelding leading the younger to the far pasture. The moon was full, the field like snow. They stood for a long time looking into the sky, lifting their heads as if listening to the stars. A shiver ran the length of the young one’s nose, along his ivory blaze, then rippled down his back, and because they were so close, traveled to the other. Deep in the cedar the waxwings felt it, awoke to see the flash of light, the waves of muscles rolling like a silvered sea, a pounding of hooves in air, then the silent pas de deux of flesh and fur, bone and sinew, reach and curve, one leading the other (now the younger, now the older) until the sky could hold them no longer and they were gone. |
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Lee M Robinson
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