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La poesie vit d’insomnie perpetuelle
—René Char
.
There’s a sickness in me. During
the night I wake up & it’s brought
a stain into my mouth, as if
an ocean has risen & left back
a stink on the rocks of my teeth.
I stink. My mouth is ugly, human
stink. A color like rust
is in me. I can’t get rid of it.
It rises after I
brush my teeth, a taste
like iron. In the
night, left like a dream,
a caustic light
washing over the insides of me.
*
What to do with my arms? They
coil out of my body
like snakes.
They branch & spit.
I want to shake myself
until they fall like withered
roots; until
they bend the right way—
until I fit in them,
or they in me.
I have to lay them down as
carefully as an old wedding dress,
I have to fold them
like the arms of someone dead.
The house is quiet; all
night I struggle. All
because of my arms,
which have no peace!
*
I’m a martyr, a girl who’s been dead
two thousand years. I turn
on my left side, like one comfortable
after a long, hard death.
The angels look down
tenderly. “She’s sleeping,” they say
& pass me by. But
all night, I am passing
in & out of my body
on my naked feet.
*
I’m awake when I’m sleeping & I’m
sleeping when I’m awake, & no one
knows, not even me, for my eyes
are closed to myself.
I think I am thinking I see
a man beside me, & he thinks
in his sleep that I’m awake
writing. I hear a pen scratch
a paper. There is some idea
I think is clever: I want to
capture myself in a book.
*
I have to make a
place for my body in
my body. I’m like a
dog pawing a blanket
on the floor. I have to
turn & twist myself
like a rag until I
can smell myself in myself.
I’m sweating; the water is
pouring out of me
like silver. I put my head
in the crook of my arm
like a brilliant moon.
*
The bones of my left foot
are too heavy on the bones
of my right. They
lie still for a little while,
sleeping, but soon they
bruise each other like
angry twins. Then
the bones of my right foot
command the bones of my left
to climb down.
From Tender. Copyright © 1997 by Toi Derricotte. (Pitt, 1997). Included in Vox Populi by permission of University of Pittsburgh Press.
Toi Derricotte is the author of six collections of poetry, most recently, I: New & Selected Poems (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2019). Derricotte is the recipient of the Academy of American Poets’ 2021 Wallace Stevens Award, given to recognize outstanding artistic achievement in the art of poetry over a poet’s career. The Poetry Society of America awarded her the 2020 Frost Medal for distinguished lifetime achievement in poetry, citing, “There are few poets who are as brave as Toi Derricotte; brave in her subject matter and brave in how she insists that even the deepest hurts must sing on the page.”

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I love this poem.
“I have to make a
place for my body in
my body.” ❤️
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how powerful, this exploration of embodiment– and our relationship with our body, so primary, so necessary, and often so unexplored
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Yes, Toi gives us a dark view of the life of the body that is, somehow, transcendent.
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Beautiful, sensuous, estranged but familiar: this poem speaks the body’s language of restlessness without conscious cause, or with so many, the arms become snakes, the dead girl. I love it.
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‘Estranged but familiar’ … exactly
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What courage, what determination to face fear, and not succumb to it, what deeply human grief in this poem. “
I put my head
in the crook of my arm
like a brilliant moon.”
How we *need* such poetry, don’t we?!
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Thanks, Laure-Anne. We do need such poetry. Although the fashion now is for happy poems about sunlight and kindness, poetry serves many purposes, including encouraging us to face fear, pain and despair.
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Amazing poem. Wow.
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It really is amazing.
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After a night of twisting and turning and panicking and peeking once again at the clock…
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Yes, me too
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Toi plumbs depths most of us barely know exist.
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How beautiful and brave anguish can be, thank you Toi, and Michael for posting.
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Yes, I love this poem for its bravery, sensuality and imagination.
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