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December 1, 2015
 

A Nearly Perfect Morning

 
Jessica Greenbaum

About This Poem

 

“It’s funny what good fortune does in the wrong mind! I mean, I try to catch myself when I’m giving my own good luck short shrift. The poem falls in that category of my preoccupation in poems (and not in poems) with the relativity of sorrow, and how to find a place for it. I’m thinking of the stellar, oft-cited poem by Jack Gilbert, ‘A Brief for the Defense,’ in which (to be crassly reductive) he talks about the need to genuinely praise delight so that the depth of real suffering has its own integrity. How does the luxury of serene beauty—a commodity so out of reach for so many—sometimes serve as a backdrop for our self-destructive, fortune-destructive tendencies? And how can we manipulate that? How can we interpret our contextual surroundings in order to best respect the richness of what we have in the world and in ourselves? And then, how to complain?”
Jessica Greenbaum

Jessica Greenbaum: "A Nearly Perfect Morning"
 

Jessica Greenbaum is the author of The Two Yvonnes (Princeton University Press, 2012). She teaches inside and outside academia, most recently through Brooklyn Poets and the World Trade Center Health Program for first responders at New York University’s medical center.

 

Photo credit: Leslie Jean-Bart

Poetry by Greenbaum

 

The Two Yvonnes

(Princeton University Press, 2012)

"[Sometimes I don’t know if I’m having a feeling]" by Matthew Siegel

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"Ponderable" by Lyn Hejinian

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"Your Brain Is Yours" by Natalie Lyalin

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Poem-a-Day

 

Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-a-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends.

 
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