‘December Canticle’ for December First
This poem dates from December 1977 and was reprinted in my recent book What Is the City? At the time I wrote this I was trying different forms for my poems and pushing myself to write in a more open way with lots of unusual images and unexpected language. The original published version of the poem has three times as many lines. This is a kind of chant, maybe even prayer, poem. I think I was in my poet-as-medicine man phase. What can I say? It happens when you’re 23. I had a part-time job and was devoted to writing. After all these years, I think the poem holds up. I hope you agree. It’s meant to be read out loud to a crowd.—PM
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December Canticle
We are love-soaked
We are full empty boats
We are alert for touch
We are orange bars of dawn
We are music in tribal horns
We are imperial conch
We are resurrection
We are contemplation
We are willow sticks
We are beginner’s feet
We are desire that beats
We are the stork
We are big medicine
We are the apricot wren
We are fish on the blocks
We are naked captains
We are ray-fed billions
We are vines that clutch
We are valiant barrels
We are muddy heralds
We are double-helix match
We are new geranium
We are rooster children
We are the latest batch
We are huckaback fabric
We are leather jacket
We are glory bound to hatch
We are street song
We are come-along
We are the cosmic stitch
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—Paul Marion (c) 1977, from What Is the City? (2006)