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    Ghost Girl

    Page 5
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      HYMN TO THE NECK

      Tamed by starched collars or looped by the noose, all hail the stem that holds up the frail cranial buttercup. The neck throbs with dread of the guillotine’s kiss, while the silly, bracelet-craving wrists chafe in their handcuffs. Your one and only neck, home to glottis, tonsils, and many other highly specialized pieces of meat, is covered with stubble. Three mornings ago, undeserving sinner though she is, yours truly got to watch you shave in the bath. Soap matted your chest hair. A clouded hand mirror reflected a piece of your cheek. Vapor rose all around like spirit-infested mist in some fabled rainforest. The throat is a road. Speech is its pilgrim. Something pulses visibly in your neck as the words hand me a towel flower from your mouth.

      IN THE ASPIRIN ORCHARD

      O analgesia trees! How your powdery

      fruit soothes. Ancient tasting tablets

      chalky as fossils dissolve on our tongues,

      tame our pains. Wearing relief’s

      crown of flowers, sex re-enters

      the room, uninvited, shy—

      disguised as religion, robed in blessed

      caresses that address every last malady.

      Reckoned rightly, all suffices.

      Misgivings licked clean, I abandoned

      my love under a budding aspirin tree.

      He was singing the chorus

      of Let’s Pretend it’s Snowing.

      He had a sleeping disease,

      and often nodded off while

      I was talking. Our treasure’s

      buried in clay pots where I first

      nursed tender aspirin saplings

      into bloom. I haven’t the heart

      to dig it up. Years have passed.

      Our orchard prospered and spread.

      Now hired pickers fill linen

      aprons with harvests of dusty pills.

      Like crumbs of asteroid

      or hailstones, clusters

      of ripening aspirins hang,

      tiny alluring lanterns,

      blurrily aglow. The merest sight

      of them palely burns aches away.

      Darling, do I hear the whining

      of distant violins?

      Let us kneel, for the age

      of fevers is upon us.

      Notes on the Poems

      “Touring the Doll Hospital” has some lines collaged into it from Walt Whitman’s letters written while he was nursing wounded soldiers during the Civil War. The quotes appear in quotation marks in the poem. Two images at the end of the poem are also drawn from those letters, in which Whitman says of one injured soldier, “I do what I can for him . . . sit near him for hours if he wishes it,” and of another, “He expressed a great desire for good strong tea.”

      In “Witch Songs,” the line “They’re all witches under the skin” is a slightly altered version of a line Bugs Bunny says at the end of a cartoon.

      In “Listen, Listen, Listen” the line “At the sound of your voice/heaven opens its portals to me” is from a Rogers and Hart song. That poem contains three or four reworked lines from The Human Voice: A Concise Manual on Training the Speaking and Singing Voice by Franklin D. Lawson, Harper & Bros., 1944.

      “The New Dog” contains some lines and language, in slightly altered form, from the Old Testament, Proverbs 1:23 and 1:27.

      “In the Aspirin Orchard” contains an inversion of the poet Christina Rossetti’s line: “all suffices reckoned rightly.”

      About the Author

      Amy Gerstler is a writer of poetry, nonfiction, and journalism who lives in Los Angeles. Her previous eleven books include Medicine, Crown of Weeds, which won a California Book Award, Nerve Storm, and Bitter Angel, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award. Her poems have appeared in a variety of magazines and anthologies, including The New Yorker, The Paris Review, American Poetry Review, and several volumes of Best American Poetry and The Norton Anthology of Postmodern American Poetry, and her journalism and art criticism have appeared in Artforum, The Village Voice, Los Angeles Magazine, Los Angeles Times, Art and Antiques, and numerous other publications. She teaches in the graduate fine arts department at Art Center, College of Design, in Pasadena, California, and is a member of the core faculty of the Master’s program in critical writing there. She is a member of the core faculty of the Bennington Writing Seminars MFA program at Bennington College in Vermont, and has taught writing and/or art at the California Institute of the Arts, Cal Tech, the University of California at Irvine, the University of Southern California, and elsewhere.

      PENGUIN POETS

      TED BERRIGAN

      Selected Poems

      The Sonnets

      PHILIP BOOTH

      Lifelines

      JIM CARROLL

      Fear of Dreaming

      Void of Course

      BARBARA CULLY

      Desire Reclining

      CARL DENNIS

      New and Selected Poems

      1974-2004

      Practical Gods

      DIANE DI PRIMA

      Loba

      STUART DISCHELL

      Dig Safe

      STEPHEN DOBYNS

      Pallbearers Envying the

      One Who Rides

      The Porcupine’s Kisses

      ROGER FANNING

      Homesick

      AMY GERSTLER

      Crown of Weeds

      Ghost Girl

      Medicine

      Nerve Storm

      DEBORA GREGER

      Desert Fathers, Uranium

      Daughters

      God

      ROBERT HUNTER

      Sentinel

      BARBARA JORDAN

      Trace Elements

      MARY KARR

      Viper Rum

      JACK KEROUAC

      Book of Blues

      Book of Haikus

      JOANNE KYGER

      As Ever

      ANN LAUTERBACH

      If in Time

      On a Stair

      PHYLLIS LEVIN

      Mercury

      WILLIAM LOGAN

      Macbeth in Venice

      Night Battle

      Vain Empires

      DEREK MAHON

      Selected Poems

      MICHAEL MCCLURE

      Huge Dreams: San

      Francisco and Beat

      Poems

      CAROL MUSKE

      An Octave Above Thunder

      ALICE NOTLEY

      The Descent of Alette

      Disobedience

      Mysteries of Small Houses

      LAWRENCE RAAB

      The Probable World

      Visible Signs

      STEPHANIE STRICKLAND V

      ANNE WALDMAN

      Kill or Cure

      Marriage: A Sentence

      PHILIP WHALEN

      Overtime: Selected Poems

      ROBERT WRIGLEY

      Lives of the Animals

      Reign of Snakes

      JOHN YAU

      Borrowed Love Poems

     

     

     



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