F: Poems

F: Poems

by Franz Wright
F: Poems

F: Poems

by Franz Wright

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Overview

Franz Wright is at his best in this beautiful and startling collection. In these riveting poems, as he considers his mortality, the poet finds a new elation and clarity on the page, handing over for our examination the flawed yet kneeling-in-gratitude self he has become.

Wright declares, “I’ve said all that / I had to say. / In writing. / I signed my name. / It’s death’s move.”

F stands both for Franz, the poet-speaker who represents all of us on our baffling lifelong journeys, and for the alphabet, the utility and sometimes brutality of our symbols. (It may be, he jokes grimly, his “grade in life.”) From “Entries of the Cell,” the long central poem that details the loneliness of the single soul, to short narrative prose poems and traditional lyrics, Wright revels in the compensatory power of language, observing the daytime headlights following a hearse, or the wind, “blessing one by one the unlighted buds of the backbent peach tree’s unnoted return.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780385349789
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication date: 08/27/2013
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 96
Sales rank: 840,279
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Franz Wright’s most recent works include Kindertotenwald and Wheeling Motel. His collection Walking to Martha’s Vineyard was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 2004, and he has also been the recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts grants, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Whiting Fellowship, among other honors. Wright lives in Waltham, Massachusetts, with his wife, the translator and writer Elizabeth Oehlkers Wright.

Read an Excerpt

LEAVE ME HIDDEN

I was having trouble deciding

which to watch: Night

of the Living Bloggers, or

Attack of the Neck-Brace People.

In the end I just went for a walk.

In the woods I stopped wondering why

of all trees

this one: my hand

pressed to fissures

and ridges of

bark’s hugely magnified

fingerprint, forehead

resting against it

finally, feeling

distinctly

a heartbeat, vast, silently

booming there deep in

my hidden leaves, blessed

motherworld, personal

underworld, thank you

thank you.



LAMP

Evening street of midnight blue with here and there a lighted window. Of the at home, or the possibly not. Concentrically into the air whose blue sphere gradually gives way to pure lethal space, wave after wave of a pale cadmium yellow expanding into emptiness and past the blood-brain barrier. Lamp manufactured unwittingly in the image of its maker the mind, which goes on emitting dim rays from its frail bulb of skull, from its insignificant and evidently random sector of an infinite place all its own; mind illuminating not much: seen, say, from its own frozen and excommunicated Pluto, it is nearly indistinguishable from any other. All minds are pretty much the same, they’ll tell you so themselves, but secretly each is devoted to the conviction that it is irreparably different from all the rest—­in fact, it is this in which they are most fundamentally alike.

Table of Contents

Four in the Morning 3

I Elderly Couple 7

Through 8

Leave Me Hidden 9

I Dreamed I Met William Burroughs 10

Roadside Grave: Winter, Mass 11

Fatalville, Ark 12

Homecoming 13

The Composer 14

Stay 15

Four Semi-Dreamt Poems 16

Whispered Ceremony 19

Postcard 2 20

Lamp 21

One 22

Crumpled-Up Note Blowing Away 25

II Entries of the Cell 29

III Dedication 49

Learning to Read 51

Panhandler 53

Rose Opening 54

Medicine Cabinet 57

Spell 58

Home Sought 59

Recurring Awakening 60

To 62

Dawn Moon Over Calvary 63

Screamed Lullaby 65

Peach Tree 67

The Party at the End 68

Rain in Waltham 71

Nativity 74

Three Basho Haibun 76

The Poem 79

Notes and Acknowledgments 81

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