Category

September 11th

Showing 1-20 of 32 results
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Day of Demonstrations

    By Sharon Olds
    Another Grand Jury
    does not hand
    an indictment down (“I Can’t Breathe”), and for a
    moment it seems as if I could be dreaming,
    the helicopters there in the dream,
    the sharp, loud
    sounds of the chopping
    of the air, the cutting it in thousands of pieces,
    fissioning...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Shelter in Place

    By Ron Silliman
    Putting the pox
    in apocalypse
    the pudding in the skull
    has a lemony taste
    just a little
    until you push through
    to the richer
    almost bitter
    sweetness at the center

    Yum is a corporate brand
    encompassing multiple
    fast-food franchise chains
    he marched his co-workers
    out of the restaurant
    & into the woods
    where he shot...
  • Poem
    By W. S. Di Piero
    They’re gathering now
    cone-head ghouls Spider-Man   
    fly-by-nighters’ burnt-cork cheeks   
    flailed sheets and twiggy voices   
    Mama stalking a border dog’s   
    crescent around back around   
    as if to fend off certain harm   
    October’s second sodium moon   
    basting the street and barbecue ribs   
    and links she smoked all day   
    to keep her four...
  • Poem
    By John Balaban
    After most of the bodies were hauled away
    and while the FBI and the Fire Department and NYPD
    were still haggling about who was in charge, as smoke cleared,
    the figures in Tyvek suits came, gloved, gowned, masked,
    ghostly figures searching rubble for pieces...
  • Poem
    By Adam Zagajewski
    Translated By Clare Cavanagh
    Try to praise the mutilated world.
    Remember June's long days,
    and wild strawberries, drops of rosé wine.
    The nettles that methodically overgrow
    the abandoned homesteads of exiles.
    You must praise the mutilated world.
    You watched the stylish yachts and ships;
    one of them had a long trip...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Searchers

    By D. Nurkse
    We gave our dogs a button to sniff,   
    or a tissue, and they bounded off   
    confident in their training,   
    in the power of their senses   
    to recreate the body,   

    but after eighteen hours in rubble   
    where even steel was pulverized   
    they curled on themselves   
    and stared up...
  • Poem
    By Tom Sleigh
    I / omen

    What was going on in the New York American
    Black/red/green helmeted neon night?
    The elevator door was closing behind us, we were the ones

    Plunging floor after floor after floor after floor   
    To the abyss—but it was someone else’s face
    Staring from the...
  • Poem
    By Peter Balakian
    When I left Eli Zabar the cut-out star on the window
    was whirling in the animation of the rich and hungry
    hunched over tables for a $30 sandwich and a Diet Coke.
     
    It was raining and the blurred glass of the galleries
    was the...
  • Poem
    By Peter Balakian
    1.
     
    A canvas with less turpentine, more hard edges, less bleeding,
    that was good for beauty, Frankenthaler in Art News
     
    in the dining car crammed with parkas and laptops
    micro-waved cellophane, plastic plates and canvas bags, 
     
    and the valley under fog as the cows...
  • Poem
    By Christina Rossetti
    Remember me when I am gone away,
             Gone far away into the silent land;
             When you can no more hold me by the hand,
    Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay.
    Remember me when no more day by...
  • Poem
    By Wisława Szymborska
    Translated By Clare Cavanagh
    They jumped from the burning floors—
    one, two, a few more,
    higher, lower.

    The photograph halted them in life,
    and now keeps them   
    above the earth toward the earth.

    Each is still complete,
    with a particular face
    and blood well hidden.

    There’s enough time
    for hair to come loose,
    for keys...
  • Poem
    By William Jay Smith
    Into the smouldering ruin now go down:
    And walk where once she walked and breathe the air
    She breathed that final day on the burning stair
    And follow her, beyond the fleeing crowds,
    Into the fire, and through the climbing clouds.

    Into the smouldering ruin...
  • Poem
    By Tony Gloeggler
    My brother was on his way
    to a dental appointment
    when the second plane hit
    four stories below the office
    where he worked. He’s never
    said anything about the guy
    who took football bets, how
    he liked to watch his...
  • Poem
    By Kenneth Goldsmith
    Metropolitan Forecast


              D8 l the new york times tuesday, september 11, 2001
              Metropolitan Forecast
              today Less humid, sunshine
              High 79. Noticeably less humid air will filter into the metropolitan region on. Brisk winds from the...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Lost

    By Carl Sandburg
    Desolate and lone
    All night long on the lake
    Where fog trails and mist creeps,
    The whistle of a boat
    Calls and cries unendingly,
    Like some lost child
    In tears and trouble
    Hunting the harbor's breast
    And the harbor's eyes....
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