Shane McCrae
Look back     a generation, I look back
    Ten generations on my mother’s side
Further, to England and to Ireland
    Knowing ten words they knew, a thousand words

Knowing the language they, my ancestors
    Knew on my mother’s side, in Ireland
In England. I look back     two genera-
    tions on my father’s side, his mother and

His father, and I’m sure I know them, most
    Of the words they knew. I can’t look back and know
Their fathers or their mothers.     I can guess
    Six generations back,     or seven, too

Many far back past     seven, back     at eight or
    Further, I might not, if I stood before them
Any     who lived in Africa, I might
    Not know a single word.     What could I say

What object could I,     if I stood before
    Them, any ancestor,     what object could
I gesture to, to    start to learn the language
    Wherever I have met them, if I stood

Before them,     any one, if there were trees
    There, I could touch a tree, say     Tree, then point
To them, then back to the tree,     or thump my chest
    And say my name, or say You are my aunt

Or say You are my father many fathers
    Before him.     What are we?     What is your word
For you? What do you know about the ocean
    If he lived inland.     If he lived beside

The ocean, if     whatever carried me
    Through time to him     could keep us there forever
I could stand listening forever, between
    Him and the ocean.     I could stand forever
from the book THE MANY HUNDREDS OF THE SCENT / Farrar, Straus and Giroux
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In this poem, I tried to write the wish to stand between one’s distant ancestors and their future suffering, which is a wish that begins with a desire to know them—paradoxically, even at the cost of one’s own being.

Shane McCrae on  "Race in Language"
Black-and-white photograph of Frank O'Hara, sitting in a butterfly chair and laughing
"A Poem That’s Like a Perfect First Date"

A. O. Scott reads Frank O'Hara: “'Having a Coke With You' unfolds as one breathless ungrammatical utterance: a 325-word run-on that starts with the title and ends without a period. All those words are layered into counterpointed rhythmic passages and arranged in long-lined stanzas....as with most good poetry, the effects—in this case, of informality, of casualness, of companionable ease—are the products of precise and careful craft."

via THE NEW YORK TIMES
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What Sparks Poetry:
Jared Stanley on "So Tough"


"When the forests (it’s more precise to call them plantations) burn now, it’s a massive conflagration. We downwinders are trapped under a persistent, poisonous haze that sticks around for sometimes six weeks. Under the smoke, it’s hard to breathe, and one feels trapped—by the material, particulate fact of the smoke, yes, but also by an atmosphere of dense thoughtlessness, a failed image of the world that the smoke has come to represent."
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