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Unread 03-20-2010, 08:42 PM
Alex Pepple Alex Pepple is offline
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Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: San Jose, CA
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Default Maryann Corbett

You may all know Maryann to be adept at disarmingly calling a fractious discussion thread to order, or racking up publication credits in venues where no Spherean has gone before, or from Dissonance, her new chapbook -- that hot new release from Scienter Press. Now, we can add to that a splendid reading performance thanks to Tim's insider knowledge of her array of skills, and his invitation to Maryann to bring us this new podcast. It's a delight to see that performance quality is matched by the first rate quality of the work. In this podcast she includes poems from the "New and Nearby" local reading series in her neighborhood, plus others from her current and previous chapbooks.

I'm sure you'll all enjoy this podcast as I have listening to it and posting it for you. Your comments most welcome -- I know that Maryann will like to see your comments about her podcast.

Cheers,
...Alex



______________________________________________



LISTEN:

Maryann Corbett Podcast


DOWNLOAD:

Maryann Corbett Podcast


The reading you're listening to in this podcast is the one I gave last summer. (There are a few photos, too.)

A good many of the poems were published online and can be linked to.
Here are the texts of the poems that are not online elsewhere, and links to the poems that are.

1. “Tattoo and Piercing Parlor”. (Scroll down.)



2. “Flight”



3. After the Divorce, I Hold a Yard Sale

They come in slowly, poker faced.
Such laying bare of earthly failings—
spread on folding tables, draped
on porch railings—

is sad and awkward, and they pass,
eyes down, before the bargain bins
and clothing racks that now confess
our venial sins:

The treadmill bought in a gust of hope
that fell, predictably, becalmed;
the set of free weights; the jump-rope,
plastic-embalmed—

enthusiasms failed. And Lord,
what hubris in these color schemes!
Which idiot was overfond
of whites and creams?

What germ of evil in our past
infected this computer's sheath,
once beige, now with a yellowish cast
like rotten teeth?

The screw loose and the weak-linked chain:
Nothing in literature or art
so bluntly explicates the line
Things fall apart....

They lie there derelict, unhaggled,
wasted, remaindered, on the skids,
redemptionless. But now a gaggle
of college kids

has blown in on a gale of laughter,
talking trash. May youth forgive
the faults age will no longer suffer!
May these bones live.

(published in The Raintown Review and Dissonance)


4. Airheads

These past few days, our local air
displays its moves with floating fuzz:
cottonwood seed scintillulas
accost my nostrils, haunt my hair.
They dance like Salome; they tease
with half-cracked helices of flight.
Waffling at each offered breeze,
fluff-head flecks, electron-light,
ride downdrafts like adagio rain—
the next half-second, loft again,
jumping at every chance to shirk
the settling down, the rooted work.
Bad moves, but just how I behave.
The weighty efforts that might save
my soul, my health, my solvency
I balk at, loving faddish stuff—
the fizz of tabloid and TV,
light music, frothy poetry—
composing life from airhead fluff.
No hundredfold of yield is found
from seed that never hits the ground,
so I take comfort when I see
white seed-fuzz piling up in grass,
brought down to earth by modest mass,
a ratio that pleases me:
Some gravitas, much levity.

(published in Alabama Literary Review and Gardening in a Time
of War
)

5. Front Page Photograph, Memorial Day

Do-nothing day. Still-cool morning.
In bare feet on the concrete stoop,
I pick the paper up, uncurl it,

and see: Before a grave's white cross,
(a phrase comes to me: prostrate with grief)
a woman lies face down in the grass,

forehead resting on folded arms.
I glance at the caption: fiancé.
And my thinking shifts, and my face warms—

the shoulders bare, the long legs parted:
the last embrace. Should I be seeing
this act of intimacy thwarted,

this woman-six-feet-above-position?
Suddenly now I find myself
firing my hard, unanswered questions

at air, while a stubborn cardinal sings,
his turf-war song like a car alarm.

I pray for wild, impossible things.

(published in Ruminate.)

6. “Showings”

7. Suburban Samsara

Season finale:
xxxxxxxxxx last fall, the street
was flaked in yellow,
xxxxxxxxxx flecked with sheet-flame,
leaf-gold layering
xxxxxxxxxx over the lawns.
The garden buddhas
xxxxxxxxxx sat bare-bellied,
navel deep
xxxxxxxxxx in a dreamed nirvana,
almost conceding:
xxxxxxxxxx Not all is suffering.


Arid, this summer.
xxxxxxxxxx After, when air
chilled, and the days
xxxxxxxxxx damped down, cheerless,
small color came:
xxxxxxxxxx the crabbed rust-brown,
the dull, dry green.
xxxxxxxxxx No gold this go-round,
wealth we waited for.
xxxxxxxxxx Only the work—
the raking, bent,
xxxxxxxxxx the wrenched back.

And we, the gullible
xxxxxxxxxx get what we get,
gold in one year,
xxxxxxxxxx rust in another,
and always, always
xxxxxxxxxx the empty branches,
their iron angles
xxxxxxxxxx scraped on the sky.

(Published in Alabama Literary Review and Gardening in a Time
of War
)

8. “Saturday Edition”

9. “Riddle 27”

10. “A Meditation on Dactylic Hexameter”

11. Mid Evil

Fortuna rules us both. We're both unhappy.
Someone fell ill, and so I have this course
to teach—I should be glad for this first crack,
but bristle at the absence of control.
You, too, feel like a pawn of random events:
your credit count, your schedule, your last name,
the prodding of advisers. Neither of us
planned on Intro to Lit. of the Middle Ages,
but here we both are, hauling ourselves to class
at eight, three times a week.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxGod knows I've tried
to woo you, show you how it's often spring
in Middle English, wintertime in Old,
and why, in so hard a time, someone took pains
to string together words for singing's sake.
And pains is the proper word. It was labora
and ora too: the calves slaughtered for vellum,
the skinning, scraping, chalking, scoring with lines,
the cutting of pens from quills. Pain is the word
for what it cost, for the years the words have waited
for you.
xxxxxxxxYou, who are always painfully there,
hard at work ignoring the four-stress line
and the notes of Sumer is icumen in.
You make a point of filling classroom space,
near horizontal, legs stretched front, head back,
arms folded, as if to make a narrow target
for the babble I pour over you, as if
to aim it right between my eyes: your boredom
with low-tech words in a language you don't speak.

And the last blow is this, your final exam,
in which, over and over, you call the course
mid evil literature. Yes, I suppose
for you that is the word. We both are learning.
In future I expect I'll be more guarded,
teaching the poems, holding back the heart.
You'll claim your paper. Mild civilities
will be exchanged, and then you'll lope away,
a sad C minus in your grip ensuring
we're done. It's mid-December. Snow will fall—
hrim ond hrith, but no one says that now,
since this is the sphere of Time, beneath the moon,
where everything must change, and where the poems
evaporate like hoarfrost in the sun.

(Published in Relief.)




12. Checking the Funeral Musicians' Schedule

January, 2006, Saint Paul, Minnesota

Start doing funerals and you notice it:
the time of year the old people decide
they've lived enough—that death might be more friendly
than winter is. Some go outside to meet it.
They toss the snow from walks in reckless swoops,
till their hearts bank and dive, and then the sirens
call us to muttered prayer. Mostly it's men
who get this easy out, who cheer themselves
right to the end with reasons to be, to do.
Their women, cursed by common sense, hang on,
caged in their houses, living on crumbs of care.
Their houses keep them alive and their houses kill them:
Rooms, more and more, resist the readying
for visits that rarely come. A room at a time,
they fill with the useless things that will not stop
singing the litanies of the dead and absent,
till living shrivels to a room or two,
a few clothes, dishes, everything hand washed,
warm water the last solace where the drafts
insinuate at every uncaulked crack
to say, Give up, dear. I don't know how long
persuasion takes. I do know where it ends.

There's nothing for it but to sing, although
my aging mezzo sinks more every year.
I curse the cold and salt the icy steps,
pray at the wakes and sing the funerals.

(published in Alabama Literary Review and Gardening in a Time
of War.
)

13. "Asparagus”


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