Sunday, January 06, 2008

Blues a poem by Elizabeth Alexander

This post is going to be a little something different. I really like Elizabeth Alexander's poetry and she wrote a poem that has a title that was made for this blog. Although the body of the poem may not fit the way we normally think of the blues. While not what most would call a traditional blues themed poem, you just have to keep reading it.

Oh and it really captures how I have been feeling lately.

Blues
by Elizabeth Alexander


I am lazy, the laziest
girl in the world. I sleep during
the day when I want to, 'til
my face is creased and swollen,
'til my lips are dry and hot. I
eat as I please: cookies and milk
after lunch, butter and sour cream
on my baked potato, foods that
slothful people eat, that turn
yellow and opaque beneath the skin.
Sometimes come dinnertime Sunday
I am still in my nightgown, the one
with the lace trim listing because
I have not mended it. Many days
I do not exercise, only
consider it, then rub my curdy
belly and lie down. Even
my poems are lazy. I use
syllabics instead of iambs,
prefer slant to the gong of full rhyme,
write briefly while others go
for pages. And yesterday,
for example, I did not work at all!
I got in my car and I drove
to factory outlet stores, purchased
stockings and panties and socks
with my father's money.

To think, in childhood I missed only
one day of school per year. I went
to ballet class four days a week
at four-forty-five and on
Saturdays, beginning always
with plie, ending with curtsy.
To think, I knew only industry,
the industry of my race
and of immigrants, the radio
tuned always to the station
that said, Line up your summer
job months in advance. Work hard
and do not shame your family,
who worked hard to give you what you have.
There is no sin but sloth. Burn
to a wick and keep moving.

I avoided sleep for years,
up at night replaying
evening news stories about
nearby jailbreaks, fat people
who ate fried chicken and woke up
dead. In sleep I am looking
for poems in the shape of open
V's of birds flying in formation,
or open arms saying, I forgive you, all.




From Body of Life by Elizabeth Alexander, published by Tia Chucha Press. Copyright © 1996 by Elizabeth Alexander.


4 comments:

mister anchovy said...

Hey, Happy New Year!

Anonymous said...

Hi! First time here. I'm working on a project about this poem and I would be more than grateful if you could share your ideas and opinions about this poem. What do you feel/ think about whle reading it? What do you think it is about? thanks in advace
Have a nice day!

Anonymous said...

Sorry, but I find this poem REALLY bad.

fitzgerald said...

Anonymous, you don't think it is bad enough to let us all know who you are. You are probably lazy and a coward too, that might be why you don't like it.