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A Poem by Mary Karr


   
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Poet's Choice

By Robert Hass
April 12, 1998

Mary Karr's poignant, tough-talking memoir of a Texas Gulf childhood, "The Liar's Club," was on bestseller lists for 60 weeks. It's probably one of the best-loved, most widely read works of literary nonfiction in this decade. Her newest book, her third book of verse, is called "Viper Rum," and it's published by New Directions. Here, for Easter, is one of the poems:

The Grand Miracle

Jesus wound up with his body nailed to a tree –
a torment he practically begged for,
or at least did nothing to stop. Pilate

watched the crowd go thumbs down
and weary, signed the order.
So centurions laid Jesus flat

on a long beam, arms run along the crosspiece.
In each palm a long spike was centered,
a stone chosen to drive it. (Skin

tears; the bones start to split.)
Once the cross got propped up,
the body hung heavy, a carcass –

in carne, the Latin poets say, in meat.
( – The breastbone a ship's prow . . . )
At the end the man cried out

as men cry. (Tears that fill the eyes
grow dark drop by drop: One
cries out.) On the third day,

the stone rolled back, to reveal
no corpse. History is rife
with such hoaxes. (Look at Herodotus.)

As to whether he multiplied
loaves and fishes, that's common enough.
Poke seed-corn in a hole and see if more corn

doesn't grow. Two fish in a pond
make more fishes. The altar of reason
supports such extravagance. (I don't even know

how electricity works, but put trust
in light switches.) And the prospect
of love cheers me up, as gospel.

That some creator might strap on
an animal mask to travel our path between birth
and ignominious death – now that

makes me less lonely. And the rising up
at the end into glory – the white circle of bread
on the meat of each tongue that God

might enter us. For 2000-near years
my tribe has lined up at various altars,
so dumbly I open this mouth for bread and song.

("The Grand Miracle" by Mary Karr, from "Viper Rum." Copyright 1998 by Mary Karr. Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.)

Robert Hass, former U.S. poet laureate, is the author, most recently, of the collection "Sun Under Wood."

 
© Copyright 1998 The Washington Post Company

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