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A Poem by Margaret Atwood


   
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Poet's Choice

By Robert Hass
May 24, 1998

Margaret Atwood is best known, of course, as a novelist. But she brings to her poetry the same sharp eye and stinging wit. Here's a poem from her book Morning in the Burned House. The book contains a moving sequence of elegies for her father, but this poem belongs to her satiric vein. It's for the boys, and the women who love them:

Romantic

Men and their mournful romanticism
that can't get the dishes done –
that's freedom, that broken wineglass
in the cold fireplace.

When women wash underpants, it's a chore.
When men do it, an intriguing affliction.
How plangent, the damp socks flapping on the line,
how lost and single in the orphaning air . . .

She cherishes that sadness,
tells him to lie down in the grass,
closes each of his eyes with a finger,
applies her body like a poultice.

You poor thing, the Australian woman
while he held our baby –
as if I had forced him to do it,
as if I had my high heel in his face.

Still, who's taken in?
Every time?
Us, and our empty hands, the hands
of starving nurses.

It's bullet holes we want to see in their skin,
scars, and the chance to touch them.

(From the book Morning in the Burned House by Margaret Atwood. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston. Copyright 1995 by Margaret Atwood. Reprinted by permission.)

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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