Here's today's offering from Knopf's Poem-A-Day for April ... If you haven't
signed up yet, it's free and fun:
http://poem-a-day.knopfdoubleday.com/?ref=poemaday_poetrynl
*Music's Spell*, a new title in the Everyman's Library Pocket Poets series,
is a gathering of poetry from a wide variety of voices through time (William
Congreve, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Amy Lowell, Langston Hughes, Anna
Akhmatova, to name a few) on the subject of music's power, on pop and rock
and jazz and blues, on composers and instruments. An unexpected treasure is
Joyce Carol Oates's entry on the King.
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*Waiting On Elvis, 1956*
This place up in Charlotte called Chuck's where I
used to waitress and who came in one night
but Elvis and some of his friends before his concert
at the Arena, I was twenty-six married but still
waiting tables and we got to joking around like you
do, and he was fingering the lace edge of my slip
where it showed below my hemline and I hadn't even
seen it and I slapped at him a little saying, You
sure are the one aren't you feeling my face burn but
he was the kind of boy even meanness turned sweet in
his mouth.
Smiled at me and said, Yeah honey I guess I sure am.
--
Andrew
http://hispirits.blogspot.com/
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