But, "Let's all die happy." That's the first line of another poem with a wonderful title, "Everybody in the Car / We Are Leaving without You," which sounds like a familiar threat, and a real invitation. Here I particularly love the hooking up of the Mother and Father of American Poetry:
...Let's set Whitman
& Dickinson up on a date & watch
as the awkwardness flames.
Aauggh, flames again! Here's a tender coincidence instead. In a scene I read this morning in the novel, a music box is important in a mother-daughter relationship. It's also part of the mother-daughter relationship in the poem "The Robin Tanka," used as an aural image: "Her voice is a music box / grown tired of being turned." My attentiveness to connection, alignment, and coincidence keeps happening, as does my commitment to this reading of a poetry book a day in August. It has felt like work, but work I love, schoolwork (and I loved school), homework, even, in a weird way, holy work. So, of course, in her poem "The Last Judgment," I find the phrase, "His Holy Homework." This work is getting me through, giving me joy, and I hope giving you some joy, too.
Now let me leave you with a few lines from her poem, "Twelve":
Though I am not strong
I want to be. I'm getting worn down
by the weakness I see.
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