Philip Levine: Poetry Poem Text

Philip Levine: Poetry Poem Text

Burial Rites (Excerpt)

Everyone comes back here to die

as I will soon. The place feels right

since it’s half dead to begin with.

Even on a rare morning of rain,

like this morning, with the low sky

hoarding its riches except for

a few mock tears, the hard ground

accepts nothing. Six years ago

I buried my mother’s ashes

beside a young lilac that’s now

taller than I, and stuck the stub

of a rosebush into her dirt,

where like everything else not

human it thrives. The small blossoms

never unfurl; whatever they know

they keep to themselves until

a morning rain or a night wind

pares the petals down to nothing.

...

Detroit, Tomorrow (Excerpt)

Newspaper says the boy killed by someone,

don’t say who. I know the mother, waking,

gets up as usual, washes her face

in cold water, and starts the coffee pot.

She stands by the window up there on floor

sixteen wondering why the street’s so calm

with no cars going or coming, and then

she looks at the wall clock and sees the time.

Now she’s too awake to go back to bed,

she’s too awake not to remember him,

her one son, or to forget exactly

how long yesterday was, each moment dragged

into the next by the force of her will

until she thought this simply cannot be.

...

The Gatekeeper's Children (Excerpt)

This is the house of the very rich.

You can tell because it’s taken all

The colors and left only the spaces

Between colors where the absence

Of rage and hunger survives. If you could

Get close you could touch the embers

Of red, the tiny beaks of yellow,

That jab back, the sacred blue that mimics

The color of heaven. Behind the house

The children digging in the flower beds

Have been out there since dawn waiting

To be called in for hot chocolate or tea

Or the remnants of meals. No one can see

Them, even though children are meant

To be seen, and these are good kids

Who go on working in silence.

- Philip Levine

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