First Annual Festival of Women's Poetry  *********************November 2008*********************
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First Annual Festival of Women's Poetry *********************November 2008********************* :: *International section :: Women poets from around the World :: Filipina poets :: Marisa de los Santos
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thepoetslizard
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 Marisa de los Santos
« Thread Started on Oct 10, 2008, 3:54pm »



Marisa de los Santos grew up in northern Virginia, received a B.A. from the University of Virginia, an M.F.A. from Sarah Lawrence College, and a Ph.D. in English literature and creative writing from the University of Houston. Her poems have appeared in Chelsea, Western Humanities Review, and Prairie Schooner; and have been collected in From the Bones Out (University of South Carolina Press). She has recently turned her hand to fiction, and has published two novels -- Love Walked In (Plume) and Belong to Me (HarperCollins). An interview with the author is at http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Belong-....e/9780061240270


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"Wiglaf"


"Wiglaf the foot–warrior sat near the shoulder of the king,
wearily sprinkling water on his face to wake him.
He succeeded not at all." —Beowulf



It is the saddest part of a sad story:

a young man in an old man's heavy shirt,

his helmet, arm–rings, all the gold gone dull

and gummed with blood. The gutted dragon lies

there twitching, and cowards—seasoned fighters—

are dragging themselves, shamefaced, from the woods.

Wiglaf's own eyes saw his master's body

caught up by waves of flame, saw long teeth tear

the great one's throat. Through clots of smoke, he

found the weak spot, struck, and found out later

what is worse than dragons. Kings die slowly,

gasping words. Young Wiglaf loved his king

and carried water to him, in his hands.

This story is and isn't old. My half–brother's

sixth–month–born, three–pound daughter was alive

an hour last December, and in spring, he's

saying this, "You haven't seen her room, yet"

although he knows I have, the crib and stack

of folded blankets, silver brush and comb

his wife lifts up to dust beneath and then

puts back. Fat bears and grinning tigers dance

across the wall. Foot–warrior Wiglaf knew

the king was dead, and still he bathed his face

to wake him, sprinkling water, while the others

watched. We are standing in my brother's yard,

where a single mimosa, bloom–decked, leans

in careful arabesque. He's choking, weary,

on his loss, and I see how love, once started,

can become a thing apart from us,

a being all its own, unstoppable,

just watching as we waste our human gestures

on the air, and who can say if it's

the monster or the hero of our lives?

*


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« Last Edit: Oct 29, 2008, 9:30am by shayepoet »Link to Post - Back to Top  IP: Logged
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