Monday, April 11, 2011

Poem - "The Perspective Fairy" by Mark Bibbins

http://www.americanlegends.com/authors/images/hemingway.jpg

This is a cool poem from The Boston Review - the idea of a perspective fairy, kind of like the tooth fairy only more disconcerting, is a great premise. One could do a whole poem cycle on that idea.

The Perspective Fairy


Henry Fonda didn’t die on you‚
he just died. Carol Burnett

says this to Liz Taylor in
a movie so Liz gets trashed

and puts a shopping bag
over her head‚ or Carol

tells Liz this to make her
feel better after trying

and failing to kill herself with
a bag. Certainly we all need

a visit from the Perspective
Fairy now and then but you

have to be careful because
not just anyone

can play him.
Ernest Hemingway was summoned

to coax a friend down from a roof
with a cold–cream jar of opium

that Ezra Pound had left for him
with the instruction to bust it

out in case of an emergency—
really if these were the guys

in charge of my safety
I’d take to the roof too—

but when the friend finally
came down‚ he threw the jar

at Hemingway’s head because he knew
that the real Perspective Fairy’s

got gigantic wings you can
almost see through.

This poem is part of BR’s special package celebrating National Poetry Month.


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