ISBN-13: 9780375711770 / Angielski / Miękka / 2008 / 112 str.
ISBN-13: 9780375711770 / Angielski / Miękka / 2008 / 112 str.
Sharon Olds completes her cycle of family poems in a book at once intense and harmonic, playful with language, and rich with a new self-awareness and sense of irony.
The opening poem, with its sequence of fearsome images of war, serves as a prelude to poems of home in which humor, anger, and compassion sing together with lyric energy sometimes comic, sometimes filled with a kind of unblinking forgiveness. These songs of joy and danger public and private illuminate one another. As the book unfolds, the portrait of the mother goes through a moving revisioning, leading us to a final series of elegies of hard-won mourning. One Secret Thing is charged throughout with Sharon Olds s characteristic passion, imagination, and poetic power.
The doctor on the phone was young, maybe on his
first rotation in the emergency room.
On the ancient boarding-school radio,
in the attic hall, the announcer had given my
boyfriend s name as one of two
brought to the hospital after the sunrise
service, the egg-hunt, the crash one of them
critical, one of them dead. I was looking at the
stairwell banisters, at their lathing,
the necks and knobs like joints and bones,
the varnish here thicker here thinner I had said
Which one of them died, and now the world was
an ant s world: the huge crumb of each
second thrown, somehow, up onto
my back, and the young, tired voice
said my fresh love s name.
from Easter 1960 "