Wednesday, January 28, 2015

January 28: Headline Poems, Lynne Knight, "On Hearing of Robin Williams' Diagnosis"

The poetry magazine Rattle does something remarkable every week.  It's a poetic challenge, really.  It's pretty simple:  write a poem based on a story from the week's news.  It can be something global or national or local.  Anything taken from the headlines.

The challenge is an attempt to make poetry seem relevant to a society that has grown up with the Internet and texts and tweets.  A society that feeds on instant information.  The moment something happens.  Poetry used to be important, dangerous even.  World leaders feared poets because poets turned a spotlight on injustice and cruelty and disaster.

Yes, poetry used to be a conduit of truth.

That's why Saint Marty loves these poems from Rattle.  They speak of something deep and raw.

On Hearing of Robin Williams' Diagnosis

by:  Lynne Knight

My mother had Lewy body dementia, too, a late
diagnosis. Eight years of losing all trace
of herself, like someone following her shadow
into a forest that got deeper and deeper
until it became what Thoreau called
standing night. Her name was Knight,
so sometimes I would think of her as
Standing Night, her shadow lost altogether
by then. Her words, her understanding.
So when I heard that Robin Williams
had the same ruinous disease, I thought
what a generous thing he had done,
what a courageous thing, without the help
of drugs or alcohol or anyone, not wanting
to implicate anyone in his death in a state
where assisted suicide is forbidden.
I thought if there were an afterworld
where the soul is restored to its original
form, my mother would find her way
to Robin Williams and tell him he’d done
the right thing, the thing she would have done
if she’d known all she had coming.
But I don’t believe the soul continues.
The spirit lives on in the hearts of others,
so Robin Williams will live as close
as it gets to forever. As for my mother,
she’d be content to know how much
my sister and I miss her, how we still
talk to her, how we rely on her wisdom
to stand us by on darkest nights.

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