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Raucous Prayer
Here, my one raucous prayer
coaxed from this poor drum,
my double heart, under a beat-up slat
of divine light. It’s habit: I evade
the foreseeable blessing, this thorn
thief, this fiend for deep bass
and the dynamics of burning—
now bird, now furnace, I’m returning
to love itself. Let me face
the beginning of sound, first horn,
origin of dirt and song. We are made
by touch, not terror for tat,
but one humble pulse in a numb
abyss. Bet, god breathes this air.
-Patrick Rosal
Patrick Rosal's poem "Gift," performed by the poet. Part of the Adrian Brinkerhoff Poetry Foundation's Read By series of poetry films. Directed by Williams Cole and produced in collaboration with @Poetsorg-fz4hx.
Brokeheart: Just Like That
When the bass drops on Bill Withers’ Better Off Dead, it’s like 7 a.m. and I confess I’m looking over my shoulder once or twice just to make sure no one in Brooklyn is peeking into my third-floor window to see me in pajamas I haven’t washed for three weeks before I slide from sink to stove in one long groove left foot first then back to the window side with my chin up and both fists clenched like two small sacks of stolen nickels and I can almost hear the silver hit the floor by the dozens when I let loose and sway a little back and just like that I’m a lizard grown two new good legs on a breeze -bent limb. I’m a grown-ass man with a three-day wish and two days to live. And just like that everyone knows my heart’s broke and no one is home. Just like that, I’m water. Just like that, I’m the boat. Just like that, I’m both things in the whole world rocking. Sometimes sadness is just what comes between the dancing. And bam!, my mother’s dead and, bam!, my brother’s children are laughing. Just like—ok, it’s true I can’t pop up from my knees so quick these days and no one ever said I could sing but tell me my body ain’t good enough for this. I’ll count the aches another time, one in each ankle, the sharp spike in my back, this mud-muscle throbbing in my going bones, I’m missing the six biggest screws to hold this blessed mess together. I’m wind- rattled. The wood’s splitting. The hinges are falling off. When the first bridge ends, just like that, I’m a flung open door.
Patrick Rosal (b. 1969) in Poem-A-Day, April 18, 2014

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How will I begin? When shall I open my mouth and let half the world fall in?
Patrick Rosal
The Woman You Love Cuts Apples for You by Patrick Rosal
The story of my heartbreak started like this: someone gave me a key that opens many doors I traded it for a key that opens only one I traded that one for another and that for another until there were no more doors and I had a fist full of keys
Patrick Rosal, “Ode to Eating a Pomegranate in Brooklyn,” published in Waxwing