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	<title>PPL's Poetry Podcast Blog</title>
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	<description>Presented by Princeton Public Library for National Poetry Month 2007.   Each day in April we will feature a local poet reading original works.</description>
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		<title>PPL's Poetry Podcast Blog</title>
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			<item>
		<title>Paul Muldoon</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/07/28/paul-muldoon-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Jul 2007 14:54:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[


The Mountain is Holding Out
&#160;

The mountain is holding out
for news from the sea
of the raid on the redoubt.
The plain won&#8217;t level with me
&#160;
for news from the sea
is harder and harder to find.
The plain won&#8217;t level with me
now it&#8217;s non-aligned
&#160;
and harder and harder to find.
The forest won&#8217;t fill me in
now it, too, is non-aligned
and its patience [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=92&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='snap_preview'><br /><p><span style="font-size:1em;color:black;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"></span><span style="font-size:1em;color:black;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"><a href="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/muldoonwp2.jpg" title="Paul Muldoon"></a><a href="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/muldoonwp2.jpg" title="Paul Muldoon"></a></span><span style="font-size:1em;color:black;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"><a href="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/muldoonwp2.jpg" title="Paul Muldoon"></a></span></p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/muldoonwp2.jpg" title="Paul Muldoon"><img width="266" src="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/muldoonwp2.jpg?w=266&#038;h=233" alt="Paul Muldoon" height="233" /></a></p>
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<strong>The Mountain is Holding Out</strong></a></p>
<p style="float:right;width:266px;">&nbsp;</p>
<p class="poemtitle"><a href="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/03/muldoonwp2.jpg" title="Paul Muldoon"></a></p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">The mountain is holding out</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">for news from the sea</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">of the raid on the redoubt.</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">The plain won&#8217;t level with me</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">for news from the sea</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">is harder and harder to find.</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">The plain won&#8217;t level with me</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">now it&#8217;s non-aligned</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">and harder and harder to find.</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">The forest won&#8217;t fill me in</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">now it, too, is non-aligned</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">and its patience wearing thin.</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">The forest won&#8217;t fill me in</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">nor the lake confess</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">to its patience wearing thin.</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">I&#8217;d no more try to guess</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">why the lake might confess</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">to a regard for its own sheen,</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">no more try to guess</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">why the river won&#8217;t come clean</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">on its regard for its own sheen</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">than why you and I&#8217;ve faced off across a ditch.</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">For the river not coming clean</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">is only one of the issues on which</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">&nbsp;</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">you and I&#8217;ve faced off across a ditch</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">and the raid on the redoubt</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemline">only one of the issues on which</p>
<p style="margin:0;" class="poemlinebr">the mountain is holding out.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"><br />
<a target="_blank" href="http://www.princeton.edu/~visarts/cwr/faculty/pmuldoon.html" title="Paul Muldoon at Princeton">Paul Muldoon</a> was born in 1951 in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, and educated in Armagh and at the Queen&#8217;s University of Belfast. Since 1987 he has lived in the United States, where he is now Howard G. B. Clark &#8216;21 Professor at Princeton University and Chair of the University Center for the Creative and Performing Arts. Paul Muldoon&#8217;s main collections of poetry are <em>New Weather</em> (1973), <em>Mules </em>(1977), <em>Why Brownlee Left</em> (1980), <em>Quoof </em>(1983), <em>Meeting The British</em> (1987), <em>Madoc: A Mystery</em> (1990), <em>The Annals of Chile</em> (1994), <em>Hay</em> (1998), <em>Poems 1968-</em><em>1998</em> (2001) and <em>Moy Sand and Gravel</em> (2002), for which he won the 2003 Pulitzer Prize. His tenth collection, <em>Horse Latitudes</em>, appeared in the fall of 2006. [<a target="_blank" href="http://www.paulmuldoon.net/" title="Paul Muldoon Official Site">http://www.paulmuldoon.net</a>]</span></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Joan Goldstein</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/05/01/joan-goldstein/</link>
		<comments>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/05/01/joan-goldstein/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 May 2007 13:31:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>pplpoetpodcast</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[



 
Soc. 101: Social Class
“Who wants to be poor?” I ask, and
no one raises their hand –
“Or middle class?” and nearly
every student nods &#8211; except for
two. “Why middle class?”
And Brian says, “That’s how you find love –
You need to have money.” Jason who
Rarely speaks mutters, “I’m tired of
Living paycheck to paycheck.” I push on. “And [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=89&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p style="text-align:center;"><img src="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/04/joangoldstein.jpg" alt="joangoldstein.jpg" /></p>
<p></a></p>
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<p><strong>Soc. 101: Social Class</strong></p>
<p>“Who wants to be poor?” I ask, and<br />
no one raises their hand –<br />
“Or middle class?” and nearly<br />
every student nods &#8211; except for<br />
two. “Why middle class?”<br />
And Brian says, “That’s how you find love –<br />
You need to have money.” Jason who<br />
Rarely speaks mutters, “I’m tired of<br />
Living paycheck to paycheck.” I push on. “And rich?<br />
Who wants to be rich?”  The two unspoken put their hands up,<br />
Into the air. “And how will you achieve this?”<br />
“By finishing school and working hard.” Scott speaks<br />
in a low voice, as if he were embarrassed to yearn for<br />
Riches.</p>
<p>“Wait!” Eric calls out – his face lined with<br />
conflict.  “Can I be both rich and middle class?”<br />
He has already chosen the middle class, but looks<br />
At me, imploringly, as if I were a Greek oracle, deciding his<br />
Fate; and even before I can find an answer, Eric<br />
Crashes his fist on the edge of the chair, “No!”<br />
He shouts, determined, “I’m tired of<br />
Being a spoiled brat – I’ll be middle-class!”<br />
And the students cheer</p>
<p><strong>A Letter Found</strong></p>
<p>A letter nearly lost – found by<br />
her daughter, amongst Cousin Patty’s<br />
papers – a letter written<br />
For, but probably not by<br />
My Romanian immigrant grandfather,<br />
Michael to his daughter<br />
Sylvia on August 6, 1926</p>
<p>In a slanted, cursive hand<br />
He says, “Dear Sylvia, I<br />
Received your address from Irving<br />
And now I am writing to<br />
You a letter.  Write me<br />
How you feel. and<br />
How you are getting along as<br />
I am very anxious to know.”</p>
<p>He signs it, “Your father, Mr.<br />
Goldstein.<br />
So formal, cousin Joyce<br />
Calls this new, startling discovery, “the<br />
Mr. Goldstein letter.” We cousins<br />
And second cousins, the youngest<br />
Alive had never met him.- never<br />
Knew him at all.</p>
<p>In life, a distant man – few fragments<br />
We know of him – but these<br />
Words in writing connect us<br />
To our past.- to this ancestor<br />
Who gave me my angled jaw, long legs<br />
And high cheekbones – but why<br />
Did he write this letter? What<br />
Sorrow was he healing for my<br />
Aunt?  Joyce thinks the Aunt<br />
Had lost a baby.- there were<br />
Others too.</p>
<p>For my grandfather, that sorrow was<br />
Deep. There were lost children in<br />
The family of Mr. Goldstein – a son<br />
They called Phillip died of diphtheria –<br />
Never mentioned – except<br />
In an interview I taped<br />
With an Uncle.  “You’ve<br />
Forgotten something,” Aunt Vera<br />
Said, “there was a son named<br />
Phillip when<br />
They lived in Albany.”</p>
<p>And there were lost grandchildren<br />
For Mr. Goldstein. too – Rachel<br />
With soft curls – I’ve seen her<br />
In a photo –and<br />
Gloria who rolled off a bed and…</p>
<p>Death had taken children and<br />
Grandchildren from the Old<br />
Romanian – near to death<br />
Himself – there was sadness<br />
Hidden in the letter – in<br />
The voice I had never heard.</p>
<p><strong>In the Chinese School: Stories</strong></p>
<p>Children in the Chinese<br />
School love stories, small,<br />
Only six, so I<br />
Read to them; “The Puppy who<br />
Runs Away”; “The Kitten Who<br />
Thinks she is a Mouse.”</p>
<p>They laugh in a burst of joy with<br />
Soft brown eyes they listen, jump<br />
From their mats and<br />
Encircle me, fingers touching<br />
My shoulders, my knees,<br />
Jostling each other with elbows,<br />
Calling out, “I can’t see –<br />
Let me see!”</p>
<p>“Let’s sing a song now”<br />
I say; once a folksinger of<br />
The sixties, I chant,<br />
“Where have all the flowers gone?”<br />
Enchanted, they listen, then,<br />
“where flowers gone,”<br />
they call back<br />
to me.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;">Joan Goldstein, Ph.D. is a poet and a sociologist who writes poems inspired by her students at Mercer County Community College, children in The Chinese School (in Montgomery township,) and her family who immigrated from Romania.  Dr. Goldstein studied creative writing with the famed Iowa University&#8217;s Writers&#8217; Workshop when Robert Lowell and John Berryman were resident poets.   She is the author of three non-fiction books and plans to connect with a publisher for a book of her poetry this year.</span></p>
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		<title>Lynn Levin</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/30/lynn-levin/</link>
		<comments>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/30/lynn-levin/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Apr 2007 14:30:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>pplpoetpodcast</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/30/lynn-levin/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[


Stump
You could say it wore a skirt of ivy flounces &#8211;
still had that much self-respect,
hadn&#8217;t realized it was dead yet, kept pumping
sap to the ghost of its branches
that rose like a glass dream. You could
call it a sort of Viennese table or a mess
after breakfast: spilled syrup
without the pancakes.  Or that it was the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=83&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong>Stump</strong></p>
<p>You could say it wore a skirt of ivy flounces &#8211;<br />
still had that much self-respect,<br />
hadn&#8217;t realized it was dead yet, kept pumping<br />
sap to the ghost of its branches</p>
<p>that rose like a glass dream. You could<br />
call it a sort of Viennese table or a mess<br />
after breakfast: spilled syrup<br />
without the pancakes.  Or that it was the sliced off</p>
<p>breast of a saint &#8212; a wound<br />
with red ants quietly nursing, and<br />
blow flies &#8212; those busy iridescent bruises &#8211;<br />
swarming in like Hells Angels</p>
<p>on a rumor of free beer.  Or<br />
that it was no longer<br />
a plant at all, but the corpse<br />
of an animal. You could offer</p>
<p>that the maple might have crushed<br />
your roof in a storm or that you had to have the light<br />
each morning the way a child needs a big glass<br />
of milk.  Or that it was the El Niño winter</p>
<p>that made everything crazy,<br />
made February break into a fever<br />
and the six-legged drunks wake up<br />
five weeks early.  You could say that the stump</p>
<p>was a bitter fountain or maybe<br />
a wild barrel of hope spilling<br />
its sweet water over the ivy frills and bark, and into<br />
the dirt making a kind of dark batter, or</p>
<p>that it was glad to be drenched in its last<br />
wet joy, as if green, or the love of green,<br />
was what it lived by.</p>
<p><strong>Snake</strong></p>
<p>There&#8217;s the wag and where&#8217;s the rest<br />
of him? Quick<br />
S of matterless<br />
motion. Ever-changing signature.<br />
Belt upon the floor without its shirts and pants.<br />
O where is the hard evidence<br />
of being? There is no fear like fear of snakes</p>
<p>unless it is thrill, its white cousin.<br />
The chance encounter<br />
with a milky stocking caught on a log.<br />
Is that the definition of ghost<br />
or careless love&#8211;that slipping free<br />
of all restrictions, all consequence?<br />
There is no thrill like the thrill of snakes</p>
<p>though for some of their length<br />
is a form of love.<br />
Once I knew a boy who embraced their loopiness,<br />
draped a green tree python<br />
over his soft shoulder&#8211;<br />
oxbow of a leather river,<br />
long cool arm of a movie star,<br />
sequined esophagus he stroked<br />
and never found its clinginess too much.<br />
The python? It couldn&#8217;t get enough<br />
of the boy&#8217;s 98.6 and nuzzled his neck<br />
with its wise triangular head.<br />
There is no love like the love of the unloved</p>
<p>unless it is escape.<br />
Consider the liquidity of the snake,<br />
the unstoppable timeline of its form,<br />
how a thin one pours<br />
through your grip like toothpaste.<br />
In a pet store a corn snake<br />
slid like a lost friend<br />
from the hole between my finger and thumb<br />
and would not come back to my fist&#8211;<br />
inch after inch<br />
of you-can&#8217;t-keep-me.<br />
There is no flight like the flight of snakes,</p>
<p>and it is not only that they slither,<br />
constrict, sometimes inject the cruel<br />
hypodermic of death.<br />
If, as I do, you fear them,<br />
consider the happiness of seeing<br />
a snake&#8217;s skeleton,<br />
of warming your hands<br />
over the pale radiator of its back<br />
or dancing so fast upon its trainless tracks<br />
you grow wings. It&#8217;s that<br />
or the unbearable vigilance of living.</p>
<p><strong>And Then</strong></p>
<p>On that day the passenger pigeon<br />
will return. Your sunburn will decide<br />
not to become cancer. You&#8217;ll remember<br />
where you left your wallet, and it will<br />
be there undisturbed. You&#8217;ll forget<br />
your lover told you to hang yourself<br />
with the telephone cord. Your neighbor<br />
with the loud radio will sell her house.<br />
You will know which papers to keep<br />
and which to throw out. You&#8217;ll find the friend<br />
you seek at break of day. Thereafter<br />
you will be known by another name.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"><br />
Lynn Levin&#8217;s most recent collection of poems, <em>Imaginarium</em> (Loonfeather Press), was a finalist for <em>ForeWord Magazine</em>&#8217;s 2005 Book of the Year Award. Her poems have appeared in <em>Boulevard</em>, <em>Hunger Mountain</em>, <em>Margie</em>, <em>Many Mountains Moving</em>, on Garrison Keillor&#8217;s show, <em>The Writer&#8217;s Almanac</em>, and many other places. A poet laureate of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Lynn Levin teaches at the University of Pennsylvania and at Drexel University, where she is also the executive producer of the cable TV show, <em>The Drexel InterView</em>.</span><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;">The poems featured here are from  Lynn Levin&#8217;s collection, <em>Imaginarium</em>, which is available through <a href="http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?z=y&amp;EAN=9780926147188&amp;itm=1">Barnes and Noble </a>or directly from <a href="http://www.loonfeatherpress.com/">Loonfeather Press</a>.</span></p>
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		<title>Elizabeth Danson</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/29/elizabeth-danson/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Apr 2007 14:40:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[


Constructing the Visible World
You can tell there’s ice in patches on the lake
only because the gulls are standing on it,
each on one leg to maintain body-warmth,
each facing into the wind as always.
Knowing it’s there you can see the ice
presenting a different surface to the air
like the skin on your mug of boiled milk
that you blew [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=87&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong>Constructing the Visible World</strong></p>
<p>You can tell there’s ice in patches on the lake<br />
only because the gulls are standing on it,<br />
each on one leg to maintain body-warmth,<br />
each facing into the wind as always.<br />
Knowing it’s there you can see the ice<br />
presenting a different surface to the air<br />
like the skin on your mug of boiled milk<br />
that you blew into wrinkles then hooked out<br />
with a fingertip or a crust to eat like cream.</p>
<p>You can tell what trees and bushes grow here<br />
only if you see their leaves or berries<br />
under them on the frost-hard ground.<br />
Out-of-season furniture, they’ve been<br />
dust-covered by honeysuckle vines,<br />
smothered into uniform hillocks of scribbles<br />
like the Seven Sleepers hidden in their hair,<br />
or Sleeping Beauty’s castle and lands<br />
overgrown with briar roses and brambles.</p>
<p>You can tell what’s happened on this land<br />
only if you can read the signs embedded<br />
in its placid grassy face: the glacier boulders<br />
pushed to its downslope edge by backhoes;<br />
the faded pasture fence marking<br />
boundaries once made stock-proof<br />
by hedges of osage orange; the trail<br />
between the last two mansions to go up,<br />
where fox scat still appears from time to time.</p>
<p><strong>Apple Trees</strong></p>
<p>Along the no man’s land beside the rails<br />
and in the woods that border the canal<br />
late April finds old apple trees in bloom<br />
at random, scattered much too thinly<br />
to be the survivors of ancient orchards,<br />
and mostly with no sign of cellar hole<br />
or the abandoned lilacs that might once<br />
have been planted around an outhouse.</p>
<p>No, these rise above nothing noteworthy–<br />
stretches of skunk cabbage, dried-up mud,<br />
or swamp in a wet spring, weedy saplings<br />
that show how high the last floodwaters rose<br />
by clinging to their stoles of twiggy mess,<br />
intertwined with plastic bags, fishing lures,<br />
dead cattails and the sort of rubbishy loot<br />
a large untidy bird might build a nest with.</p>
<p>I like to think of the man who dug the canal<br />
or laid the rails for a pittance, in muck<br />
and shale, through rock and river bottom,<br />
pausing to munch the apple given him<br />
by a farmer’s daughter he’d smiled at<br />
in the last settlement they passed, or else<br />
by the boss to mark a mile achieved<br />
ahead of schedule, and tossing away the core.</p>
<p><strong>Undigested Fragments</strong></p>
<p>Owl pellets our fifth graders teased apart<br />
in the biology lab are like their dreams,<br />
filled with remnants of the day before.</p>
<p>Different owls make different bricolages.<br />
One loved mice–here are the vertebrae<br />
and bent-comb ribcages of three,<br />
with two of their skulls and a skeletal tail,<br />
neatly pasted to the labeled file card.</p>
<p>Another found a young chipmunk;<br />
we can tell it by its teeth, and the length<br />
of its leg bones, laid out on the white<br />
rectangle as though on a mortuary slab<br />
below the wing-cases of a beetle.</p>
<p>This one seems to have dined on baby birds,<br />
coughing up their inch-long yellow legs,<br />
their beaked skulls, their fledgling feathers;<br />
and the next card shows a schematic frog<br />
from an owl who hunted near a pond.</p>
<p>As retold dreams catch only shards<br />
this gluey display lacks the juicy crunch<br />
of each starlit meal, the blood and innards,<br />
the wriggle and squeal and flutter of death,<br />
the warm joy of hunger assuaged again.</p>
<p><strong>The Luxury of Obstacles</strong></p>
<p>Without necessity, no invention.<br />
One-celled animals live the simple life,<br />
no worries, no urges more important<br />
than consuming and dividing, but</p>
<p>when something exerts extraordinary<br />
pressure<br />
the inventions are more and more<br />
amazing:<br />
sex!<br />
adaptation. mutation. disease.<br />
death!</p>
<p>not to mention the land adventure,<br />
the taste of plants and other animals,<br />
dance and speech and misunderstanding,<br />
accidental or intentional. religion.<br />
politics. cell phones.</p>
<p>In the end we have to love the stuff<br />
that complicates and lengthens life:<br />
traffic lights, crowded doctors’ waiting rooms,<br />
taking off our shoes in airports, sausage recalls.<br />
And all the machines that need reprogramming<br />
every time the power fails.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;">Elizabeth (Mimi) Danson was born in India, spent her early childhood in China, and was educated in England. She has lived in Princeton for most of her adult life, teaching at Princeton Day School, working in publishing, and administering an arts center. Her writing has appeared in <em>US 1 Worksheets</em>, <em>The New Review</em>, <em>Fourth Genre</em>, and other publications. Her book, &#8220;<em>The Luxury of Obstacles</em>,&#8221; was published by <a href="http://www.raggedsky.com">The Ragged Sky Press</a> in 2006.</span></p>
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		<title>Catherine KHN Magia</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/28/catherine-khn-magia/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Apr 2007 14:02:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>pplpoetpodcast</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[


Thai Massage
Hands and feet come first
Reluctantly, with the sensory responsibility
Of a blind boy, he pauses
As his skin measures the size
Of the room, by the dampness
And heat, implicit in air
He speaks English, as we all do
Spicy Thai accent punctuating
The monotone cadence like sparse, leaky
Boats breaking the smooth line
Of waves that always seem to fall
He flirts in [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=85&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong>Thai Massage</strong></p>
<p>Hands and feet come first<br />
Reluctantly, with the sensory responsibility<br />
Of a blind boy, he pauses<br />
As his skin measures the size<br />
Of the room, by the dampness<br />
And heat, implicit in air</p>
<p>He speaks English, as we all do<br />
Spicy Thai accent punctuating<br />
The monotone cadence like sparse, leaky<br />
Boats breaking the smooth line<br />
Of waves that always seem to fall</p>
<p>He flirts in the silences<br />
Hollows between bone and flesh and perspiration<br />
As the contours of his hands, beating<br />
Down my weary back as a drum<br />
A slow, steady rhythm of pain<br />
At my deliberate request</p>
<p>I imagine he is distilling my blood<br />
Thick, obstinate blood of a woman<br />
Flowing simultaneously to the head<br />
And to the heart, naively believing<br />
It would heal.</p>
<p>He asks my name, then my age<br />
Youth is detectable, porous to the touch<br />
His fingers linger, remembering a woman<br />
By the texture of salt on her skin,<br />
The roughness, the lack of immersion<br />
Between water and sun-oil</p>
<p>I recall the negation of his eyes<br />
Fluttering, winged lids pretending to fly<br />
Beyond the story of a boy who does not see<br />
The sad story of a fatalistic girl<br />
Who does not know how to die.</p>
<p><strong>This Moment</strong></p>
<p>Tonight I am awake in twilight’s cool sobriety<br />
Contemplating the expanse of a moment<br />
Discerning the octaves of silence from dreams<br />
This moment I am dreaming, because a woman can have many lives.</p>
<p>This moment a woman is pretending to sleep<br />
Her husband nuzzling her ear, his legs juxtaposed on her thighs<br />
Soft, raspy whispers of things she does not want to hear<br />
She murmurs a tepid, “I love you,” because he expects it.</p>
<p>This moment a child is crying, skin bracing the cold nitrogen<br />
Of the atmosphere, that instant life enters her pores<br />
Displacing amniotic warmth with dryness and indifference<br />
And she cries, as we all do, because it hurts.</p>
<p>This moment a mother is also crying, her salt flowing onto plastic veins<br />
Conducting her breath back into the dark tunnel where it all began.<br />
Morphine numbing a somber swelling in her breast, and she cries<br />
Because time is evaporating and her thoughts are yet unfinished.</p>
<p>This moment a farmer is awakening, darkness preceding<br />
An opalescent morning; the cock is crowing and his daughter<br />
Milking the cows; she moves on to the corn-studded landscape.<br />
The hoe is tough, but she ploughs onward because that is her identity.</p>
<p>This moment a writer is obliterating words<br />
Electronic letters dancing across a screen, visible and invisible<br />
Between intervals, inspiration mingled with fatigue, the sweat<br />
Spilling into her eyes, stinging, and she fears she may go blind.</p>
<p>This moment a woman is reminiscing the dead<br />
Steam swirling from the hazelnut coffee he used to make<br />
That she continues to drink with cream, allowing the haunting<br />
To occur, because the table is empty and she is alone.</p>
<p>This moment is memory alive, a continuous pearl on a bracelet<br />
Congealed salt, sweat, and spit pressured into an imperfect sphere<br />
Situated one by one, each making possible the next<br />
Coming full circle around a woman’s wrist.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"><br />
Catherine KHN Magia is still discovering her own poetic voice.  She has been published in the <em>Michigan Quarterly Review</em> and <em>Lips</em>.  She has been a TV talk show host on public access television in Northern NJ.  She works as a manager of marketing research for Bristol Myers Squibb Co. and currently resides in Plainsboro, NJ.</span></p>
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		<title>Ruth O&#8217;Toole</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/27/ruth-otoole/</link>
		<comments>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/27/ruth-otoole/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Apr 2007 12:47:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>pplpoetpodcast</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[

 
Lost
I push you in your chair,
Bringing you back again to where I found you
Curled up and alone.
I remember I sat in the pew beside you.
Your solitude made me uncomfortable.
I stayed through the day until I was sure you were not lost but
Thrown away,
Then wheeled you home.
You flop your head.
I present a shoulder.
Your mouth flinches,
You [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=81&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong>Lost</strong></p>
<p>I push you in your chair,<br />
Bringing you back again to where I found you<br />
Curled up and alone.<br />
I remember I sat in the pew beside you.<br />
Your solitude made me uncomfortable.<br />
I stayed through the day until I was sure you were not lost but<br />
Thrown away,<br />
Then wheeled you home.<br />
You flop your head.<br />
I present a shoulder.<br />
Your mouth flinches,<br />
You stare blankly,<br />
But I bring you here each day to hear them sing,<br />
<em>To You oh Lord I lift my soul,<br />
To You I lift my soul.<br />
</em>Your arm falls.<br />
I lift it back into your lap<br />
And smooth your long blond hair.<br />
You were well groomed when I found you.<br />
Someone must have loved you<br />
And stopped.<br />
I wash you on the bed with a towel.<br />
Your body is heavy to turn.<br />
I grind your meals<br />
And push them down your throat with my fingers.<br />
I dress you, my doll.<br />
I used to put you before the TV<br />
But your face would turn to the window like a plant to the sun.<br />
I trim your nails, your hair.<br />
I change your diapers,<br />
Your pads.<br />
For whom do you bleed?<br />
I talk to you but<br />
I don’t know who it is you hear.<br />
You are voiceless.<br />
Did you ever sing?<br />
When you look into my eyes it is because<br />
I have placed myself before you.<br />
Your eyes look capped,<br />
Dark frozen seas.<br />
Nothing goes in or out anymore.<br />
Did they ever really look into another’s eyes?<br />
What did they see last?<br />
What made them stop looking?<br />
I don’t know what you long for.<br />
I don’t know what you lost.<br />
I don’t know why God preserves you but<br />
To teach me the end of love.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"><br />
Ruth Ruth O&#8217;Toole is the author of Otsu and Other Poems, published by<a href="http://www.bronzebygold.com/"> Bronze by Gold Press</a>, and available at <a href="http://www.amazon.com/">amazon.com</a>. Her novel <em>Clarissa@Loveless.com</em> was published serially through <a href="http://www.classicnovels.com/">classicnovels.com</a> in 2002, and can now be read online in its entirety at <a href="http://www.clarissa.loveless.com/">www.clarissa.loveless.com</a>. Ms. O&#8217;Toole earned her MA in English at NYU in 1990. She lives in Morristown, New Jersey, with her husband and three children, and is currently working on a forthcoming novel about the influence of sex and celibacy on women artists. </span></p>
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		<title>Shanti Tangri</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/26/shanti-tangri/</link>
		<comments>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/26/shanti-tangri/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Apr 2007 13:43:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>pplpoetpodcast</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[


Isaac’s Complaint
“Where was Sarah when Abraham took his son up the mountain?” Alicia Suskin Ostriker
Mother, did father tell you
where he took me this morning?
Did he tell you why
we went to the mountain top?
Why did he not want me
to wake you up?
Why did he slip out
of the back door tip-toe?
Did you see the kitchen knife
he took [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=77&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong>Isaac’s Complaint</strong></p>
<p><em>“Where was Sarah when Abraham took his son up the mountain?” Alicia Suskin Ostriker</em></p>
<p>Mother, did father tell you<br />
where he took me this morning?<br />
Did he tell you why<br />
we went to the mountain top?<br />
Why did he not want me<br />
to wake you up?<br />
Why did he slip out<br />
of the back door tip-toe?<br />
Did you see the kitchen knife<br />
he took with him?<br />
Mother, are you listening?<br />
From this day on<br />
I am never going to go<br />
anywhere without you.</p>
<p><strong>My Father</strong></p>
<p>My Father who is in Heaven,<br />
when he was on Earth<br />
if he were like God,<br />
I would have run away<br />
from home</p>
<p><strong>Memories on Turning 75</strong></p>
<p>Good memories,<br />
I have many.<br />
A good memory<br />
I do not have.</p>
<p><strong>Untitled</strong></p>
<p>This morning,<br />
my father looked at me in the mirror<br />
and said,<br />
When I was your age<br />
I was two years dead,<br />
why complain, my son?</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;">Born, feb.1,1928 in Rawalpindi(then in India, now in Pakistan).Grew up in Lahore.B.Sc. in Physics in Pyhysics and Chemistry, M.A. in Economics, both from Punjab University;Ph.D.in Economics, U.of Calif.Berkeley, Cal.Except for a year as free lance writer and journalist, and has been in school most of his life as a student or a  teacher. Shanti has had published essays and poetry in Hindi,short stoties in Urdu, and written, directed and produced plays in Punjabi, Hindi and English. Having taught at various universities, Shanti retired from Rutgers after 28 years of teaching in 1998.<br />
</span></p>
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		<title>Wendy Kwitny</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/25/wendy-kwitny/</link>
		<comments>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/25/wendy-kwitny/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Apr 2007 14:10:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>pplpoetpodcast</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[


The Wendy House
There are no tears in the house of poetry.
&#8211;Sappho
Gentlemen, the door is air.
Come in, the birds will adore you.
A house of words is not bricks,
but resonance.  The roses are curious;
reading is a game of badminton
to them.  Any English child has a name
for it, this place of pretend,
like the hat-crowned house the [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=78&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong>The Wendy House</strong></p>
<p><em>There are no tears in the house of poetry.<br />
&#8211;Sappho</em></p>
<p>Gentlemen, the door is air.<br />
Come in, the birds will adore you.<br />
A house of words is not bricks,<br />
but resonance.  The roses are curious;<br />
reading is a game of badminton<br />
to them.  Any English child has a name<br />
for it, this place of pretend,<br />
like the hat-crowned house the lost boys built<br />
around the fallen Wendy.<br />
There is only a noun up my sleeve.<br />
It is true, too, an Arab child calls his verses houses<br />
and may carry hundreds before the day is through.<br />
Ladies, my frown returns like a homing pigeon.</p>
<p>My arm is paper, like my long brown hair.<br />
I use my pen to chip away a whole,<br />
crowd into this place where I am not alone.<br />
Like Wendy, who wakened to mother lost boys,<br />
I rub my eyes and teach lost words to fly.<br />
I am sorry this chair is not wood.<br />
That this cup is but two consonants, a vowel<br />
and a syllable.  Nevertheless,<br />
I hope you are comfortable.<br />
The roses say you are beautiful.<br />
Today, the Arab children recite houses<br />
to the English.  Through the smallest windows,<br />
Beethoven&#8217;s laughter is heard.<br />
Friends, the t  is served.  Please stay.</p>
<p>The sky is homemade and the birds are singing.<br />
<strong>Piano</strong></p>
<p>I want to go home<br />
said the small, blond boy at the door<br />
of his house and I knew<br />
what he meant, how the heart<br />
has a different number and street<br />
and its door opens perpetually to a man<br />
we cannot find in these rooms,<br />
these real rooms I have painted the color<br />
of flowers longing for this interior winter,<br />
this winter of the heart to end,<br />
these beautiful rooms and halls<br />
a widow and her two small boys wander<br />
not knowing what else to do<br />
like a certain length of music<br />
in search of a piano.</p>
<p><strong>The Telephone Man</strong></p>
<p>Most of the time he was the back of a gray shingled house,<br />
not very attractive, with grass and a line hooked up for clothes,<br />
underlined by my windowsill;<br />
but sometimes he was the floor of my bedroom<br />
or the rug in the hall.</p>
<p>His voice moved around my rooms like a spirit<br />
moving in and out of my objects;<br />
sometimes claiming the paperweight,<br />
only to  fly off suddenly inside the body of a bird;<br />
for nearly a week it possessed the roses he sent<br />
and fled to a bowl after  I threw them out.</p>
<p>Sometimes the actual man would show up,<br />
his face defined by shadows that fell  beneath his lashes<br />
and chin,Vermeer-like glints on his eyes and lips<br />
that made him even more real looking;<br />
he smelled like a creature I belonged to,<br />
so unlike the beige receiver of my telephone.</p>
<p>But his arrival was hinged on departure<br />
like the little boy in Proust<br />
who perpetually waits under the covers<br />
for his mother&#8217;s goodnight kiss<br />
and comes to realize that as soon as her steps<br />
approach,  they recede;<br />
an opening of the door begins its closing.</p>
<p>I couldn&#8217;t trust which kiss was which,<br />
hello and goodbye were just a matter of degree.<br />
The little boy under his covers,<br />
I against my wall.</p>
<p>Like the anorexic who makes eating<br />
a special occasion, or the suicide<br />
who does the same for death,<br />
he would choose to withhold<br />
Monday and Tuesday and all the other duller moments,<br />
denying me the ordinary affection<br />
of such times.</p>
<p>My body became a photograph of itself,<br />
a reference to something past,<br />
concluded, no more than a resonance,<br />
like the voice on the radio in the car as he pulled away<br />
or the daily god that rose from the answering machine.<br />
To my nothingness, its memory,<br />
he offered me his phantom hand<br />
with a bouquet of invisible flowers.</p>
<p>Time became an inconvenience,<br />
no longer unfolding, but rewinding.<br />
Real life was a passenger in the one we hoped for,<br />
while the good dream we all wake up from<br />
trying to determine the meaning of,<br />
left us with only the dust of  what it felt like.</p>
<p>That particular day,<br />
because we were not on the telephone,<br />
I was reminded how empty I feel<br />
when the children run from me<br />
and go to their friends<br />
and the driveway is full of snow<br />
and  that kiss was not hello<br />
and he is in reverse<br />
backing away, and away,<br />
and I stood there<br />
as cold as I could bear<br />
biting my lip until it bled<br />
knowing the phone in the house was dead,<br />
if indeed it had ever really lived.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;">Wendy Woody Kwitny&#8217;s book, <em>House of Affection</em>, was published by The Sheep Meadow Press in 2004.</span></p>
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		<title>John Setliffe Bourne</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/24/john-bourne/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Apr 2007 13:57:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[


The Poetry Workshop
Your poem “The Whale in my Back Yard,”
lacks sufficient imagery. I want to actually
hear the sounds of the sea, angry men
in mortal combat—we need a riot of colors,
verbs, adverbs, adjectives, and so forth.
Lose the first eight stanzas—they are really
“just information,” anybody can do that.
Great, palpitating, monstrous killer whale
seems rather forced. How about something
simpler, [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=74&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p><strong>The Poetry Workshop</strong></p>
<p>Your poem “The Whale in my Back Yard,”<br />
lacks sufficient imagery. I want to actually<br />
hear the sounds of the sea, angry men<br />
in mortal combat—we need a riot of colors,<br />
verbs, adverbs, adjectives, and so forth.</p>
<p>Lose the first eight stanzas—they are really<br />
“just information,” anybody can do that.</p>
<p><em>Great, palpitating, monstrous killer whale</em><br />
seems rather forced. How about something<br />
simpler, like <em>big fat whale</em> ?</p>
<p><em>Tubes of blood coursing down Main St</em>.,<br />
what’s that all about? Is blood supposed<br />
to represent the hero’s ambivalence toward<br />
whale meat? And what are camels doing in there?</p>
<p>The line breaks lack authority, and you should<br />
never end a line with a double iamb. Here—<br />
lose the last stanza, make the next to last stanza<br />
the first stanza, after the deleted first eight stanzas.</p>
<p>Take out references to the French Revolution,<br />
no one really cares any more. And, just what<br />
does <em>my callow ex-wife the raging whale killer</em><br />
refer to? Can this be made clearer?</p>
<p>You have only one really good stanza,<br />
but we deleted it. Have you read Goethe?</p>
<p><strong>Pluto</strong></p>
<p>Pluto, they&#8217;re beginning to talk about you,<br />
something about losing your status as the planet farthest<br />
from our reluctant mother the sun.</p>
<p>After all those solitary years aloft, your reputation<br />
in all the books, nudged aside by some big glob of ice—<br />
so far away, where darkness is the only rule.</p>
<p>And who are we to pronounce your place in the cosmos,<br />
even though each of us is, in the smallest way,<br />
a dying star, far from everything we know.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;">John Setliffe Bourne lives in New Jersey with his wife, Adele, also a poet. His poetry has appeared in the <em>Asheville Poetry Review</em>, <em>Mad Poets Review,</em> <em>Mississippi Review</em>, <em>Paterson Literary Review</em>, <em>Southern Poetry Review </em>, and <em>U. S. 1 Worksheets</em>. He received the <em>Atlanta Review </em>Certificate of Merit for their International Poetry Competitions 2004 and 2005, and honorable mentions from Allen Ginsberg Poetry Award, <em>Mississippi Review</em>, and <em>Nimrod</em>.</span></p>
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		<title>Prologue to Henry V</title>
		<link>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/23/prologue-to-henry-the-5th/</link>
		<comments>http://pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com/2007/04/23/prologue-to-henry-the-5th/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Apr 2007 14:36:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>pplpoetpodcast</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[


Happy Birthday, William


Henry V Prologue(as read by Erik Sherr)
O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend
The brightest heaven of invention,
A kingdom for a stage, princes to act
And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!
Then should the warlike Harry, like himself,
Assume the port of Mars; and at his heels,
Leash&#8217;d in like hounds, should famine, sword and [...]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=pplpoetpodcast.wordpress.com&blog=835308&post=71&subd=pplpoetpodcast&ref=&feed=1" />]]></description>
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<p align="center"><a href="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/04/vickianderic.jpg" title="vickianderic.jpg"></a>Happy Birthday, William</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img src="http://pplpoetpodcast.files.wordpress.com/2007/04/vickianderic.jpg" alt="vickianderic.jpg" /></p>
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<p><strong>Henry V Prologue</strong>(as read by Erik Sherr)</p>
<p>O for a Muse of fire, that would ascend<br />
The brightest heaven of invention,<br />
A kingdom for a stage, princes to act<br />
And monarchs to behold the swelling scene!<br />
Then should the warlike Harry, like himself,<br />
Assume the port of Mars; and at his heels,<br />
Leash&#8217;d in like hounds, should famine, sword and fire<br />
Crouch for employment. But pardon, and gentles all,<br />
The flat unraised spirits that have dared<br />
On this unworthy scaffold to bring forth<br />
So great an object: can this cockpit hold<br />
The vasty fields of France? or may we cram<br />
Within this wooden O the very casques<br />
That did affright the air at Agincourt?<br />
O, pardon! since a crooked figure may<br />
Attest in little place a million;<br />
And let us, ciphers to this great accompt,<br />
On your imaginary forces work.<br />
Suppose within the girdle of these walls<br />
Are now confined two mighty monarchies,<br />
Whose high upreared and abutting fronts<br />
The perilous narrow ocean parts asunder:<br />
Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts;<br />
Into a thousand parts divide on man,<br />
And make imaginary puissance;<br />
Think when we talk of horses, that you see them<br />
Printing their proud hoofs i&#8217; the receiving earth;<br />
For &#8217;tis your thoughts that now must deck our kings,<br />
Carry them here and there; jumping o&#8217;er times,<br />
Turning the accomplishment of many years<br />
Into an hour-glass: for the which supply,<br />
Admit me Chorus to this history;<br />
Who prologue-like your humble patience pray,<br />
Gently to hear, kindly to judge, our play.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;"><br />
Erik Sherr is a professional actor who has appeared with the Princeton Rep Shakespeare Festival in its productions of <em>The Taming of the Shrew</em> and <em>King Lear</em>, as well as extensive New York and regional credits which include: The Atlantic Theatre Company, NADA, Shakespeare &amp; Co., The Delaware Theatre Company, and The Hampton Playhouse. Mr. Sherr is a graduate of NYU/Tisch School of the Arts.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size:0.8em;font-family:'Palatino Linotype',serif;">Victoria Liberatori is the founder and artistic director of the Princeton Rep Company/Princeton Rep Shakespeare Festival, a professional Actor&#8217;s Equity theatre since 1984.</span></p>
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