Monday, August 21, 2023

Joan Houlihan

Joan Houlihan and the Role of the Poet-Critic – Contemporary Poetry Review

Stark, North of Gainsboro

His body follows its shrunken pattern
and specification: he is placed in the final chair; 
he is clapped with heat along the landscape 
of his skin. Each carpal of his wrist 
quickly cracks to tinder-sticks. 

All that we can do, is done:
the strapping and jolting, the ceremonial 
drubbing; even mummery and finger-play 
behind his volted head. We hose him 
as we would a tree, wrinkled and run deep 

with char. The body, pinned and porous, shivers, 
briefly sways, as if a damaged wall is lightly pushed.
Empty-handed and incarnate, he is taken like a pet
and carried with his head cupped from behind.
Look on him. He is always ours, and cold. 

 

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