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Margo Berdeshevsky: Beyond My Used-up Words

Keening with the fallen.
And that is not enough.

Then how will I sleep or write of herons?
Tides, torn in an angry sea’s claw. Stilled

flesh whitening
where the wild orchid rises and withers,

her tiny many mouths along a single stalk—
a chorus — all its stilled children

call for any god to reach them.
Breaths stopped — no murmurs left —

and that is not enough.
~

When I see you, my breath tears
there between your bodies.

If I say
what I know of plenty and of empty,
how will I sleep, or dream of herons?

Leaps cut down
curled— used— on the bright,
of road blood stilled in its breeze.

Be
safe this day,
friends, don’t curl

and don’t be killed
not this day, not after. There will be
cold wakings when your fist will haunt all

sleep. When the dun silence will leave.
I mean to see you
if ever I cannot stand.

This side of the new-born stream
there’s no blood yet.

But let our cry
carry.
Infant, in its clairvoyant’s caul.

Let our knowing— bleed.
How can we sleep, or write of the fallen?

I am without skin
today.
Your drum— deeper, and going deeper in.

And that is not enough.

There is a place where the wing tears.
And there is a day when the heron stands.
And there is a river for revolution

—the hardest love, coming in.
Bring me to the river where lives begin, where
our nakedness needs no skin, bring me to

where it begins and begins. Nameless. And coming in.
At the end of the beginnings, we dress in long light—
a hybrid body of stars— River, where the parched

heart drinks her fill,
hill where the unborn
climb.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Margo Berdeshevsky, born in New York City, lives and writes in Paris. Her most recent  collection is Kneel Said the Night (a hybrid book in half-notes) from Sundress Publications. Her collection Before The Drought was a finalist for the National Poetry Series. 

From Before The Drought (Glass Lyre Press, 2017). Reprinted in Vox Populi by permission of the author.


Photo taken at the Little Estero Critical Wildlife Area at Fort Myers Beach, Florida. (Tacony Creek Creatures)

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9 comments on “Margo Berdeshevsky: Beyond My Used-up Words

  1. Barbara Huntington
    June 18, 2024
    Barbara Huntington's avatar

    Thank you, a second reading and another and another. Still finding new ways it reaches me

    Like

  2. rhoff1949
    May 30, 2024
    rhoff1949's avatar

    The energy of this poem shades into prophecy. “This side of the new-born stream/ there’s no blood yet” is terribly aware of our present. Thank you for focusing my spirit today, when it would rather be distracted and ungrounded.

    And thank you to Michael as always for Vox Populi.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Vox Populi
      May 30, 2024
      Vox Populi's avatar

      Thank you, Richard. The poem works associatively, like a dream, rather than logically like a story or argument. I find it very moving.

      >

      Liked by 1 person

  3. laureannebosselaar
    May 30, 2024
    Laure-Anne Bosselaar's avatar

    A “cri du coeur” indeed — which I translate as “heart-cry” to “heart-scream”…

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Lisa Zimmerman
    May 30, 2024
    Lisa Zimmerman's avatar

    “And there is a river for revolution

    —the hardest love, coming in.”

    And still:

    “Keening with the fallen.
    And that is not enough.” 💔

    Liked by 2 people

  5. Barbara Huntington
    May 30, 2024
    Barbara Huntington's avatar

    I always plan to wait to read Vox Populi until after my online meditation. But then I cheat and then know I will return to savor or question when there is no deadline. Thank you for first read. I will return.

    Like

  6. Margo Berdeshevsky
    May 30, 2024
    Margo Berdeshevsky's avatar

    Thank you so very much! to Michael Simms for publishing this dear to my heart poem of mine, (a cri du coeur for the falling in these our terrible days of wars..) .with care, margo

    Liked by 2 people

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This entry was posted on May 30, 2024 by in Environmentalism, Poetry, spirituality and tagged , , .

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