Lee Ann Roripaugh
the hunger of trying to hold back
the hunger a little bit longer

the hunger of restraint and pullback
churn and growl of beached fishes
in an agitated bouillabaisse
liquid silver squirming on an empty shore

to lick the gilding from the buildings
like golden drizzles of caramel

to take the cake / flick off the crumbs

to raze the fruit / spit out the pits

the hunger of sucked-out marrow
the unwillingly pried-open oyster
the cracked and pillaged lobster claw

to shuck / to husk / to unshell
her way to what’s most tender

to dismantle the protective scrims
that signal a cache of rawness

to demolish defenseless succulence

the hunger for the liquid center
squirt of ganache in a swiss truffle
chocolate lava cake’s molten fondant core

to feed past the end of greed

to feast past the end of want

to gorge past the borders of voraciousness
until she becomes the monstrous goddess
of binge / pure mercenary lack

the blooded face

blood in the water

the blood moon’s exposed sweet throat
with its lipsticked jugular bitten clean out
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Whitmanites Act to Preserve the Poet’s House
 

At a New York Landmarks Preservation Commission hearing in early June, advocates called for the inclusion of Walt Whitman's home, 9 Ryerson St. in Clinton Hill, where he lived from May 1855 to April 1856. From this modest townhouse, he published the first version of "Leaves of Grass."

via BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE 
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"I was twenty and an undergraduate at Howard University, taking Dr. Jon Woodson’s Survey of African American Poetry. He was suspicious of labels and spent the first weeks of class arguing against his own course title. His first lecture began with a summary dismissal of Maya Angelou, who a year earlier was Bill Clinton’s Inaugural Poet. He would hand out poems with the authors’ names blacked out, and ask: 'What makes this a Black poem, or is this good or bad?' We had to defend our answers. Our shortcomings were immediately evident. This is how I was introduced to Gwendolyn Brooks’ 'A Lovely Love.'"

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