Poet Louise Glück

Louise Glück wins the Nobel prize for literature

An astonishing poet and we congratulate her on receiving this great honor.

Here’s a sampling of her bold, provocative poems, that hold barbs and balm in equal measure. Louise Glück says “(writing)… is not decanting of personality. The truth, on the page, need not have been lived. It is, instead, all that can be envisioned.”

Photographer unknown

Photographer unknown

Love Poem

There is always something to be made of pain.
Your mother knits.
She turns out scarves in every shade of red.
They were for Christmas, and they kept you warm
while she married over and over, taking you
along. How could it work,
when all those years she stored her widowed heart
as though the dead come back.
No wonder you are the way you are,
afraid of blood, your women
like one brick wall after another. 

 
The poet Louise Glück. Photograph: Sigrid Estrada/AP

The poet Louise Glück. Photograph: Sigrid Estrada/AP

 

The Wild Iris

At the end of my suffering
there was a door.

Hear me out: that which you call death
I remember.

Overhead, noises, branches of the pine shifting.
Then nothing. The weak sun
flickered over the dry surface.

It is terrible to survive
as consciousness
buried in the dark earth.

Then it was over: that which you fear, being
a soul and unable
to speak, ending abruptly, the stiff earth
bending a little. And what I took to be
birds darting in low shrubs.

You who do not remember
passage from the other world
I tell you I could speak again: whatever
returns from oblivion returns
to find a voice:

from the center of my life came
a great fountain, deep blue
shadows on azure seawater. 

Photograph: Katherine Wolkoff

Photograph: Katherine Wolkoff

The White Lilies

As a man and woman make
a garden between them like
a bed of stars, here
they linger in the summer evening
and the evening turns
cold with their terror: it
could all end, it is capable
of devastation. All, all
can be lost, through scented air
the narrow columns
uselessly rising, and beyond,
a churning sea of poppies--

Hush, beloved. It doesn't matter to me
how many summers I live to return:
this one summer we have entered eternity.
I felt your two hands
bury me to release its splendor.