A.E. Stallings: Pick of the Week [ed. Terence Winch]

Photo credit  Kostas Mantziaris______________________________________________________________________

Empathy

My love, I’m grateful tonight

Our listing bed isn’t a raft

Precariously adrift

As we dodge the coast guard light,

And clasp hold of a girl and a boy.

I’m glad we didn’t wake

Our kids in the thin hours, to take

Not a thing, not a favorite toy,

And didn’t hand over our cash

To one of the smuggling rackets,

That we didn’t buy cheap life jackets

No better than bright orange trash

And less buoyant. I’m glad that the dark

Above us is not deeply twinned

Beneath us, and moiled with wind,

And we don’t scan the sky for a mark,

Any mark, that demarcates a shore

As the dinghy starts taking on water.

I’m glad that our six-year-old daughter,

Who can’t swim, is a foot off the floor

In the bottom bunk, and our son

With his broken arm’s high and dry,

That the ceiling is not seeping sky,

With our journey but hardly begun.

Empathy isn’t generous,

It’s selfish. It’s not being nice

To say I would pay any price

Not to be those who’d die to be us.

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A.E. Stallings is an American poet in Greece. She has published four volumes of verse and a selected poems (This Afterlife), the last with Farrar, Straus and Giroux in the U.S. and Carcanet in the U.K. She has also published three volumes of verse translation, most recently an illustrated The Battle Between the Frogs and the Mice with Paul Dry Books. A prose book, Frieze Frame: How Poets, Painters, and their Friends Framed the Debate Around Elgin and the Marbles of the Parthenon, is just out with Paul Dry Books. Stallings is currently the Oxford Professor of Poetry. [Author photo by Kostas Mantziaris.]
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A01                       Théodore Géricault, The Raft of Medusa (1818-19), oil on canvas, Louvre, Paris