poetry about storytelling

Apr 12, 2010 13:21



Why We Tell Stories by Lisel Mueller

I
Because we used to have leaves
and on damp days
our muscles feel a tug,
painful now, from when roots
pulled us into the ground

and because our children believe
they can fly, an instinct retained
from when the bones in our arms
were shaped like zithers and broke
neatly under their feathers

and because before we had lungs
we ( Read more... )

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Comments 3

pynelyf April 13 2010, 12:45:29 UTC
The images in those first few stanzas are amazing.

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pynelyf April 13 2010, 12:49:51 UTC
Also, this totally inspired me to look up more Lisel Mueller, and this one was so haunting:

Bedtime Story by Lisel Mueller

The moon lies on the river
like a drop of oil.
The children come to the banks to be healed
of their wounds and bruises.
The fathers who gave them their wounds and bruises
come to be healed of their rage.
The mothers grow lovely; their faces soften,
the birds in their throats awake.
They all stand hand in hand
and the trees around them,
forever on the verge
of becoming one of them,
stop shuddering and speak their first word.

But that is not the beginning.
It is the end of the story,
and before we come to the end,
the mothers and fathers and children
must find their way to the river,
separately, with no one to guide them.
That is the long, pitiless part,
and it will scare you.

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morgiana April 14 2010, 05:44:55 UTC
That is truly chilling. It's so strange, about healing, but not really hopeful.

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