David Ignatow Life Poems

  • 1.
    at fifty I approach myself,
    eighteen years of age,
    seated despondently on the concrete steps
    of my father's house,
    ...
  • 2.
    I'm very pleased to be a body. Can there be someone without a body?
    As you hold mine I feel firmly assured that bodies are the right thing
    and I think all life is a body. I'm happy about trees, grass and water,
    especially with the sun shining on it. I slip into it, a summer pleasure.
    ...
  • 3.
    If we could be brought to the surface
    like a gleaming fish and served for supper,
    if we could eat and swallow our own life
    to make a good meal, if we could go fishing
    ...
  • 4.
    As I reach to close each book
    lying open on my desk, it leaps up
    to snap at my fingers. My legs
    wonâ??t hold me, I must sit down.
    ...
  • 5.
    You wept in your mother's arms
    and I knew that from then on
    I was to forget myself.

    ...
  • 6.
    In a dream I'm no longer in love. I breathe deeply this sense of freedom,
    and I vow never again to seal myself in, but I am reminded it is myself I love
    also and that too is a kind of sealed condition. I am committed to taking
    care of my body and its home accommodations, its clothes and neat
    ...
Total 6 Life Poems by David Ignatow

Top 10 most used topics by David Ignatow

I Love You 8 Love 8 World 6 Death 6 Life 6 People 5 Head 5 Live 5 Child 5 Street 4

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Poem of the day

John Keats Poem
Sonnet Xvi. To Kosciusko
 by John Keats

Good Kosciusko, thy great name alone
Is a full harvest whence to reap high feeling;
It comes upon us like the glorious pealing
Of the wide spheres -- an everlasting tone.
And now it tells me, that in worlds unknown,
The names of heroes, burst from clouds concealing,
And changed to harmonies, for ever stealing
Through cloudless blue, and round each silver throne.
...

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