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    <name><![CDATA[beauregard]]></name>
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  <id type="integer">76548</id>
  <isbn>0374530742</isbn>
  <isbn13>9780374530747</isbn13>
  <ratings_count type="integer">306</ratings_count>
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  <title>Averno: Poems</title>
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  <link>http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/76548.Averno_Poems</link>
<author>
  <id type="integer">388727</id>
  <name>Louise Gl&#252;ck</name>
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    <rating>5</rating>
  <votes>1</votes>
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        <shelf name="poetry" />
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  <date_added>Wed Mar 05 13:52:58 -0800 2008</date_added>
  <date_updated>Thu Mar 27 11:09:36 -0700 2008</date_updated>
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    <body><![CDATA[Prism<br/>Louise Gluck<br/><br/>1.<br/>Who can say what the world is? The world<br/>is in flux, therefore<br/>unreadable, the winds shifting,<br/>the great plates invisibly shifting and changing-<br/><br/><br/>2.<br/>Dirt. Fragments<br/>of blistered rock. On which<br/>the exposed heart constructs<br/>a house, memory: the gardens<br/>manageable, small in scale, the beds<br/>damp at the sea's edge-<br/><br/><br/>3.<br/>As one takes in<br/>an enemy, through these windows<br/>one takes in<br/>the world:<br/><br/>here is the kitchen, here the darkened study.<br/><br/>Meaning: I am master here.<br/><br/><br/>4.<br/>When you fall in love, my sister said,<br/>it's like being struck by lightning.<br/><br/>She was speaking hopefully,<br/>to draw the attention of the lightning.<br/><br/>I reminded her that she was repeating exactly<br/>our mother's formula, which she and I<br/><br/>had discussed in childhood, because we both felt<br/>that what we were looking at in the adults<br/><br/>were the effects not of lightning<br/>but of the electric chair.<br/><br/><br/>5.<br/>Riddle:<br/>Why was my mother happy?<br/><br/>Answer:<br/>She married my father<br/><br/><br/>6.<br/>&quot;You girls,&quot; My mother said, &quot;should marry<br/>someone like your father&quot;<br/><br/>That was one remark. Another was,<br/>&quot;There is no one like your father.&quot;<br/><br/><br/>7.<br/>From the pierced clouds, steady lines of silver.<br/><br/>Unlikely<br/>yellow of the witch hazel, veins<br/>of mercury that were the paths of the rivers-<br/><br/>Then the rain again, erasing<br/>footprints in the damp earth.<br/><br/>An implied path, like<br/>a map without a crossroads.<br/><br/><br/>8.<br/>The implication was, it was necessary to abandon<br/>childhood. The word &quot;marry&quot; was a signal.<br/>You could also treat it as aesthetic advice;<br/>the voice of the child was tiresome,<br/>it had no lower register.<br/>The word was a code, mysterious, like the Rosetta stone.<br/>It was also a roadsign, a warning.<br/>You could take a few things with you like a dowry.<br/>You could take the part of you that thought.<br/>&quot;Marry&quot; meant you should keep that part quiet.<br/><br/><br/>9.<br/>A night in summer. Outside,<br/>sounds of a summer storm. Then the sky clearing.<br/>In the window, constellations of summer.<br/><br/>I'm in a bed. This man and I,<br/>we are suspended in the strange calm<br/>sex often induces. Most sex induces.<br/>Longing, what is that? Desire, what is that?<br/><br/>In the window, constellations of summer.<br/>Once, I could name them.<br/><br/><br/>10.<br/>Abstracted<br/>shapes, patterns.<br/>The light of the mind. The cold, exacting<br/>fires of disinterestedness, curiously<br/>blocked by earth, coherent, glittering<br/>in air and water,<br/>the elaborate<br/>signs that said now plant, now, harvest-<br/>I could name them, I had names for them:<br/>two different things.<br/><br/><br/>11.<br/>Fabulous things, stars.<br/><br/>When I was a child, I suffered from insomnia.<br/>Summer nights, my parents permitted me to sit by the lake;<br/>I took the dog for company.<br/><br/>Did I say &quot;suffered&quot;? That was my parents' way of explaining<br/>tastes that seemed to them<br/>inexplicable: better &quot;suffered&quot; than &quot;preferred to live with the dog.&quot;<br/><br/>Darkness. Silence that annulled mortality.<br/>The tethered boats rising and falling.<br/>When the moon was full, I could sometimes read the girls' names<br/>painted to the sides of the boats:<br/>Ruth Ann, Sweet Izzy, Peggy My Darling-<br/><br/>They were going nowhere, those girls.<br/>There was nothing to be learned from them.<br/><br/>I spread my jacket in the damp sand,<br/>the dog curled up beside me.<br/>My parents couldn't see the lift: in my head;<br/>when I wrote it down, they fixed the spelling.<br/><br/>Sounds of the lake. The soothing, inhuman<br/>sounds of water lapping the dock, the dog scuffling somewhere<br/>in the weeds-<br/><br/><br/>12.<br/>The assignment was to fall in love.<br/>The details were up to you.<br/>The second part was<br/>to include in the poem certain words,<br/>words drawn from a specific text<br/>on another subject altogether.<br/><br/><br/>13.<br/>Spring rain, then a night in summer.<br/>A man's voice, then a woman's voice.<br/><br/>You grew up, you were struck by lightning.<br/>When you opened your eyes, you were wired forever to your true love.<br/><br/>It only happened once. Then you were taken care of,<br/>your story was finished.<br/><br/>It happened once. Being struck was like being vaccinated;<br/>the rest of your life you were immune,<br/>you were warm and dry.<br/><br/>Unless the shock wasn't deep enough.<br/>Then you weren't vaccinated, you were addicted.<br/><br/><br/>14. <br/>The assignment was to fall in love.<br/>The author was female.<br/>The ego had to be called the soul.<br/><br/>The action took place in the body.<br/>Stars represented everything else: dreams, the mind, etc.<br/><br/>The beloved was identified<br/>with the self in a narcissistic projection.<br/>The mind was a subplot. It went nattering on.<br/><br/>Time was experienced<br/>less as narrative than ritual.<br/>What was repeated had weight.<br/><br/>Certain endings were tragic, thus acceptable.<br/>Everything else was failure.<br/><br/><br/>15.<br/>Deceit. Lies. Embellishments we call<br/>hypotheses-<br/><br/>There were too many roads, too many versions.<br/>There were too many roads, no one path-<br/><br/>And at the end?<br/><br/><br/>16.<br/>List the implications of &quot;crossroads.&quot;<br/>Answer: a story that will have a moral.<br/>Give a counter-example:<br/><br/><br/>17.<br/>The self ended and the world began.<br/>They were of equal size,<br/>commensurate,<br/>one mirrored the other.<br/><br/><br/>18.<br/>The riddle was: why couldn't we live in the mind.<br/><br/>The answer was: the barrier of the earth intervened.<br/><br/><br/>19.<br/>The room was quiet.<br/>That is, the room was quiet, but the lovers were breathing.<br/><br/>In the same way, the night was dark.<br/>It was dark, but the stars shone.<br/><br/>The man in bed was one of several men<br/>to whom I gave my heart. The gift of the self,<br/>that is without limit.<br/>Without limit, though it recurs.<br/><br/>The room was quiet. It was an absolute,<br/>like the black night.<br/><br/><br/>20. <br/>A night in summer. Sounds of a summer storm.<br/>The great plates invisibly shifting and changing-<br/><br/>And in the dark room, the lovers sleeping in each other's arms.<br/><br/>We are, each of us, the one who wakens first,<br/>who stirs first and sees, there in the first dawn,<br/>the stranger.<br/>]]></body>
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