15 Mar: "Song of Smoke" by Kevin Young

Song of Smoke

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To watch you walk
cross the room in your black

corduroys is to see
civilization start—

the wish-
whish-whisk

of your strut is flint
striking rock—the spark

of a length of cord
rubbed till

smoke starts—you stir
me like coal

and for days smoulder.
I am no more

a Boy Scout and, besides,
could never

put you out—you
keep me on

all day like an iron, out
of habit—

you threaten, brick-
house, to burn

all this down. You leave me
only a chimney.

2 comments:

  1. A lot of power in this poem- both fear and courage...imagery, you leave me only a chimney....smoke coming out of the ears?
    Assume that he speaks of his father....acting his power over the household...instilling fear- it is crazy how this was a lot of how people were raised in the old days, I wonder how many households still hold to this idea or power?

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  2. I didn't see the father son dynamic. I like that interpretation.

    I can also see a couple. The fire is a metaphor for fighting. It starts and then just turns to a chimney of smoke. The smoke a symbol for the destructive things people say when they get upset.

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