Poetry Friday — Norman Dubie

Mercy, we are in the midst of a storm.

Weekly hurricanes, and the market takes a terrible crash.

Political emails fall and pile up like a blizzard of snow.

The news sounds like one long weather report of natural and unnatural disaster.

And still, somehow, we’re supposed to carry on, reading and writing and eating.
Sending our children to school.
Brushing the dog.

We pay a bill and write a thank you note and unload the dishwasher.

It is amazing what we people will do in the face of it all.

The word ‘survive’ doesn’t begin to do it justice, do you think?
It’s really more like thriving.
Most days, most people will laugh at a joke or help someone move a heavy piece of furniture or give or receive a kiss.

It is amazing to me what we people will do in the face of it all.

Of Politics & Art
By Norman Dubie

Here, on the farthest point of the peninsula
The winter storm
Off the Atlantic shook the schoolhouse.
Mrs. Whitimore, dying
Of tuberculosis, said it would be after dark
Before the snowplow and bus would reach us.

She read to us from Melville.

(Read the rest right here. Really. Do. It’s very good.)

24 Responses to “Poetry Friday — Norman Dubie”

  1. Anonymous

    Of Politics and Art

    Elaine M.

    That’s a great selection for Poetry Friday–and a fine post for the political and economic times in which we find ourselves today, Liz!

  2. Anonymous

    Liz, how do you always find the perfect poem for your Poetry Friday thoughts? I like this one, and I’ve never seen it before. Somehow, it made me think of “The Grapes of Wrath” (oh the strong women in that one!), which I’ve been wanting to re-read lately.

    Thanks,
    Jules
    7-Imp

  3. Anonymous

    TadMack says: 🙂

    Wow, Liz. This one is just …beautiful. The right poem at the right moment.

    May you have peace in the midst of the storm.

  4. Anonymous

    thank you

    from a storm-weary, melville-reading (truly!), dishwasher-unloader.
    -annette

  5. mlyearofreading

    I’m just having a moment of eerie resonance — a “me, too” moment. I just posted about my Ohio experience with Hurricane Ike. Then I came here and it was like looking in the mirror. Great poem. Thanks. And my heart goes out to you and all the others who were in the more direct path. Both times.

  6. laurasalas

    Oh, lovely. And I’m reading Life as We Knew It, a terrific novel about what we do when the world may or may not be ending. Thanks for sharing this poem!