Muffin of Sunsets
Elaine Equi
The sky is melting. Me too.
Who hasn’t seen it this way?
Pink between the castlework
of buildings.
Pensive syrup
drizzled over clouds.
It is almost catastrophic how heavenly.
A million poets, at least,
have stood in this very spot,
groceries in hand, wondering:
"Can I witness the Rapture
and still make it home in time for dinner?"
----
Also:
+ After Work, Richard Jones
+ Dolores Park, Keetje Kuipers
+ A Sunset, Ari Banias
Swing your sweet chariot low enough to read poems from:
2025: There Are Two Worlds, Larry Levis
2024: Broken Periodic, Maya C. Popa
2023: Speech to the Young: Speech to the Progress-Toward (Among them Nora and Henry III), Gwendolyn Brooks
2022: We Lived Happily During the War, Ilya Kaminsky
2021: Hurry, Marie Howe
2020: Oh, Robert Creeley
2019: It Was Summer Now and the Colored People Came Out Into the Sunshine, Morgan Parker
2018: In Two Seconds, Mark Doty
2017: Aubade, Louis MacNeice
2016: Before, Ada Limón
2015: Sign for My Father, Who Stressed the Bunt, David Bottoms
2014: Ullapool Bike Ride, Chris Powici
2013: Clothespins, Stuart Dybek
2012: Ghost Story, Matthew Dickman
2011: Graves We Filled Before the Fire, Gabrielle Calvocoressi
2010: On Being Asked To Write A Poem Against The War In Vietnam, Hayden Carruth
2009: The Bear-Boy of Lithuania, Amy Gerstler
2008: Today’s News, David Tucker
2007: All There is to Know About Adolph Eichmann, Leonard Cohen
2006: Gamin, Frank O’Hara
2005: [this is what you love: more people. you remember], D.A. Powell