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Poems

October 1996

Fleshly answers

by Rachel Hadas

Doomed beauties, my companions, my familiars,
your long arms braceleted with snakes of danger,

a question twines in all the undergrowth.
How can we tell the living from the dead?

Puvis de Chavannes’s tall pearly figures
dressed as sturdy Spartans at the chase

turn out to be pale paper dolls in space.
And how can we be sure that we’re alive?

Our bodies, aging, changing, slow and stiffen.
On flesh if not yet quite inert increasingly opaque,

bite or bruise or blemish pose the questions
Where have you been? What have you been doing?

My sister’s leg, scaled by a manic cat
nearly three years ago, still is scored and punctured.

Last September I picked blackberries
barearmed; here are the scratches ten weeks later.

We are passing through the world.
This is some of what it does t ...

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Rachel Hadas is co-editor of The Greek Poets (Norton)
more from this author


This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 15 October 1996, on page 40
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