More Lies

Sometimes I say I’m going to meet my sister at the café—
even though I have no sister—just because it’s such
a beautiful thing to say. I’ve always thought so, ever since

I read a novel in which two sisters were constantly meeting
in cafés. Today, for example, I walked alone
on the wet sidewalk, wearing my rain boots, expecting

someone might ask where I was headed. I bought
a steno pad and a watch battery, the store windows
fogged up. Rain in April is a kind of promise, and it costs

nothing. I carried a bag of books to the café and ordered
tea. I like a place that’s lit by lamps. I like a place
where you can hear people talk about small things,

like the difference between azure and cerulean,
and the price of tulips. It’s going down. I watched
someone who could be my sister walk in, shaking the rain

from her hair. I thought, even now florists are filling
their coolers with tulips, five dollars a bundle. All over
the city there are sisters. Any one of them could be mine.

– Karin Gottshall

Postscript:
The poem starts off with a ordinary enough tone, with the poet talking about meeting her sister at the cafe. You get a jolt with the phrases ‘even though I have no sister’, ‘just because it’s such a beautiful thing to say’. Then she talks again of ordinary things, commonplace things – novels, rain boots, stationery, the weather, the price of tulips. As you settle back into those mundane concerns, you get another loaded pair of statements ‘All over the city there are sisters’, and ‘Any one of them could be mine’. You’re left with this poignant sense of loneliness and hope.
You can read more about Karin Gottshall on her site here, and a couple of interviews with her here and here.

Insomniac

There are some nights when
sleep plays coy,
aloof and disdainful.
And all the wiles
that I employ to win
its service to my side
are useless as wounded pride,
and much more painful.

– Maya Angelou

Postscript:

This one is for all of you who, like me, are unable to sleep some nights, or wake up and can’t fall asleep.
We’ve run another poem by her on this site, Caged Bird.
You can read more about Maya Angelou here and here.

Nothing’s As It Should Be

The pie is not easy.
The pin is not neat.
The bees are not busy.
The milk is not meek.

The hound, not lazy.
The clams aren’t happy.
The loon is not crazy.
The friend-in-need, snappish.

The cat piss is not mean.
The thieves are not thick.
The hound’s tooth is not clean.
The winks are not quick.

The fiddle is not fit.
The bells, never clear.
The honey’s never sweet.
The three-dollar bill, unqueer.

The molasses isn’t slow.
The church mouse, not poor.
The mule, not stubborn in toto.
The ceiling’s not another’s floor.

The bunny isn’t dumb.
The toothache doesn’t hurt.
The rail is not thinsome.
The soil’s not cheap as dirt.

The grass isn’t green.
The horses aren’t healthy.
Nothing’s right about the rain:
God’s not in Heaven, all’s not OK.

– Robert Phillips

Postscript:
There are days that feel like this, no?
You can read a little about the poet here.