Wojahn is known for tightly structured, if not formalistic, poems, with powerful images. One that he read (not in the collection, but from a separate souvenir broadside that was issued for the reading) is “August 1953”—here’s an excerpt:
“A nurse gathers up the afterbirth. My motherI’m guessing there aren’t a lot of poems out there about afterbirth. I’m looking forward to diving into the collection.
had been screaming but now could sleep.
by this time I am gone—also gathered up
& wheeled out. Above my jaundiced face the nurses hover.”
2 comments:
Cliff, I'm sure you're quite right about the scarcity of afterbirth poems, but there is the one by Ted Hughes (called, in fact, "The Afterbirth"), with this vivid line (among others):
"I eased/The heavy, fallen Eden into a bowl/Of ovenproof glass."
Hmm. Enough for an anthology? I wasn't aware of the Hughes poem but I suppose Wojahn was. I don't see an echo of the Hughes line in Wojahn's poem, though--that would have been interesting.
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