When you burst through the body’s confines
in the grip of joy,
think of the black hole's
birth cry:
When you burst through the body’s confines
in the grip of joy,
think of the black hole's
birth cry:
While voicing anguish, Diaz’ narrators are never pitiable, nor does he allow the suffering self to wallow.
Read Moreare you aware that
with you
went the sun
all light
and what few stars
there were?
A southern snowflake in blizzard descends.
The winter you’re born beach town’s snowed in.
An alabaster tourist never blends.
You’re not like your parents. You don’t pretend.
We do not colonize
We pillage and remove.
Sea anemones grow every year. She remembers. She’s not the hunter
but knows provocation. I sing to the bees and make honeycakes.
The fourth poet in this series is Karin Boye, a Swedish poet born in Gothenburg in 1900. Her first collection of poems, entitled Clouds came out on 1922. In 1931 founded the poetry magazine Spektrum with Erik Mesterton and Josef Riwkin, translating many of T.S. Eliot’s poems.
Read MoreThe doctor wasn't supposed to
but she prescribed herself
to try new things.
"Something new once a week,
repeat, repeat."
Alda Merini put a lot of poetry and other writings into this world, but it is hard to find a lot of it translated! Below you will find both poems and aphorisms, or as Merini called them "spells of the night."
Read MoreAnd when you have put
Into it the soul
That through the bedrooms
Became entangled
Then, good man,
Ask that I be white
Ask that I be like snow
Ask that I be chaste
So while looking for a type of Morningsong that was NOT an Aubade I came across quite a few gems that I will hope inspire you to write different, or write anew.
Read MoreWe are sixteen and arrogant. We follow curiosity
in the cab of your F-150, skip what we told
our mothers about church. Our prayers are songs
pumped loud through speakers. We sing hymns
of Kurt Cobain, flush against our wind-flung hair.
witch blood, witch body, witch woman
handing out sweet milk and revenge
Jupiter
There is a storm older than the world (at the center of everything),
churning gods’ blood
(eating the flesh of their flesh).
Its daughters turned
into ice and rock under a jealous rain, bending
all the softness into metal.
(Don’t look).
This gale sings in hydrogen tongues
and swallows
swallows
swallows
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Ashely Adams is an MFA candidate in nonfiction at the University of South Florida. Her work has appeared in Flyway, Heavy Feather Review, Fourth River, Anthropoid, Permafrost, OCCULUM and others. Her favorite astronomical body is the Galilean moon, Europa.
We’re an elegy, if by elegy you mean
a motherfucker ready to light this place up.