When You Pulled the Barrettes Out

    of my hair
    reading Lorca
    and Thomas, said
    you like what
    ever flowed, salt
    sea in me moving
    toward you, midnight
    dissolving like
    prints on wet
    sand green ocean
    licks. Tongue
    on my ear. By
    the end of the
    rain haze, after the
    Vietnam blues
    song and Barcelona
    lights dissolving.
    your eyes let go
    like the hand
    of a murdered
    lover turning
    white under
    ground, waving
    goodbye


    Afterward the Phone Dangles like Rope

    someone swung from
    for the last time. Dead end,
    cut connections. My words
    dissolve from your skin. I
    draw blanks when you say
    you are afraid with a woman
    you’ve just met, know that
    you might like her, be
    vulnerable so you create
    a distance. Life comes back
    two years after the volcano

    is on a newspaper scrap. I try
    to imagine I’m in Italy. This
    conversation is barbed wire
    and I’ve taken off my clothes,
    say I want more than a photo
    graph. Snow clots and I can’t
    remember what only that you
    never touched me, just moved
    your penis toward my mouth.
    Once the stethoscope on the
    quilt touched me like a hand.
    The lilies had her on her knees,
    air black with silver stars
    I
    write on a slip of paper, not
    knowing what to say, hanging
    on like someone slamming
    toward a brick wall in a Chevy
    convertible who floors the gas
    as if I could get thru


    At the All Night Talk Radio Station

    I get there early, fantasizing this meeting
    over a year, already stuck on a voice I’m
    sure I have to be with. The window in the
    ladies room is open as I want to be in pale
    pink leather jeans and flung open jacket I’m
    imagining are my thighs. outside the open
    glass, an April night full of branches

    rubbing other branches. I lock the door and
    flush a few times, huddling away from the
    glass that doesn’t have a shade so no one could
    suppose I’m gulping white wine to be up. I’m
    determined this man not be disappointed,
    wrap my self in vodka so whatever the poetry
    questions are, no matter how silly the calls,

    I will sparkle even tho I’ve an early flight to
    Ohio in the morning. I carefully zip and unzip,
    would hate to snag any of this leather I plan
    to pack. I run the water, line my lips in guava
    rose under the cracked mirror there’s only
    fluorescent harsh lights above, highlighting
    flaws I know won’t show over the microphone

    in the darker room. A little mouthwash, a mint
    and I let warm water spread my Tea Rose and
    Chloe around so after I’ve left he’ll remember
    and then sail, like a model leaving a velvet
    lined dressing room, out on to the runway
    as if what was ahead was all that mattered


    Like the Print, Still on my Grey Wall
    Where your Palm Pressed

    after smoothing
    baby oil on my
    back and thights.
    Later, the sticky
    circles from wine
    coolers on veneer,
    all that connected.
    Still, your voice
    on my answering
    tape is a drug
    and when I stand
    naked in front
    of the mirror, I
    expect traces of
    you, stains where
    your lips moved
    like a survivor
    of the A-bomb who
    came to an aid station
    with silhouettes
    of the dead branded
    into her cheeks,
    her neck, up
    and down her body


    Hearing You I Think Drunk on the Air

    I thought of those French
    ditches the man who hung
    stained glass where it would
    turn a grey Wednesday
    bright as diamond, too, told
    me to try. Even your voice
    floods this April, ground
    water rising to take what
    I couldn’t use away from
    where it could flood, stain
    whatever was surprised
    by it taking stairs in me
    6 at a time. Too expensive,
    as you. And the dark water
    like you only comes when
    I don’t expect, am not ready.
    If I had willows or mango
    roots, star apple saplings
    they’d hold on too, use what
    throws me. When I hear it
    rain, I remember those
    Thursdays before Ravenna
    it always thundered. The
    room shook, the water
    flowing in deep past barriers
    into aquifers I’d hoard
    twenty-three months


    from my new book:
      beforeitslight.jpg - 6040 Bytes
    Before It's Light - Lyn Lifshin
    $16.00 (1-57423-114-6/paper)
    $27.50 (1-57423-115-4/cloth trade)
    $35.00 (1-57423-116-2/signed cloth)
    Bird.gif - 156 BytesBlack Sparrow Press


Lyn Lifshin

     Lyn Lifshin has written more than 100 books and edited 4 anthologies of women writers. Her poems have appeared in most poetry and literary magazines in the U.S.A., and her work has been included in virtually every major anthology of recent writing by women. She has given more than 700 readings across the U.S.A. and has appeared at Dartmouth and Skidmore colleges, Cornell University, the Shakespeare Library, Whitney Museum, and Huntington Library. Lyn Lifshin has also taught poetry and prose writing for many years at universities, colleges and high schools, and has been Poet in Residence at the University of Rochester, Antioch, and Colorado Mountain College. Winner of numerous awards including the Jack Kerouac Award for her book Kiss The Skin Off, Lyn is the subject of the documentary film Lyn Lifshin: Not Made of Glass. For her absolute dedication to the small presses which first published her, and for managing to survive on her own apart from any major publishing house or academic institution, Lifshin has earned the distinction "Queen of the Small Presses." She has been praised by Robert Frost, Ken Kesey and Richard Eberhart, and Ed Sanders has seen her as " a modern Emily Dickinson."
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