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Poem-a-day

The Possessed

This afternoon, discomfortable dead
Drift into doorways, lounge, across the bridge, 
Whittling memory at the water’s edge, 
And watch. This is what you inherited. 

Random they are, but hairy, for they chafe
All in their eye, enlarging like a slide;
Spectral as men once met or crucified, 
And kind. Until the sun sets you are safe. 

A prey to your most awkward reflection, 
Loose-limbed before the fire you sit appalled. 
And think that by your error you have called
These to you. Look! the light will soon be gone. 

Excited see from the window the men fade 
In the twilight; reappear two doors down. 
Suppose them well acquainted with the town
Who built it. Do you fumble in the shade? 

The key was lost, remember, yesterday, 
Or stolen—undergraduates perhaps;
But all men are their colleagues, and eclipse
Very like dusk. It is too late to pray. 

There was a time crepuscular was mild, 
The hour for tea, acquaintances, and fall 
Away of all day’s difficulties, all 
Discouragement. Weep, you are not a child. 

The equine hour rears, no further friend, 
Intolerant, foam-lathered, pregnant with 
Mysterious grave watchers in their wrath
Let into tired Troy. You are near the end. 

Midsummer Common loses its last gold, 
And grey is there. The sun slants down behind 
A certain cinema, and the world is blind
But more dangerous. It is growing cold. 

Light all the lights, heap wood upon the fire
To banish shadow. Draw the curtains tight. 
But sightless eyes will lean through and wide night 
Darken this room of yours. As you desire. 

Think on your sins with all intensity. 
The men are on the stair, they will not wait. 
There is a paper-knife to penetrate
Heart & guilt together. Do it quickly.

From The Heart Is Strange: New Selected Poems by John Berryman, edited and selected by Daniel Swift. Copyright © 2014 by Kathleen Berryman Donahue. Used by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. All Rights Reserved.

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John Berryman

John Berryman
Photo credit: Tom Berthiaume
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About Poem-a-Day

Poem-a-Day is the original and only daily digital poetry series featuring over 250 new, previously unpublished poems by today’s talented poets each year. Omotara James is the Guest Editor of June. Read or listen to a Q&A with James about her curatorial process, and learn more about the 2025 Guest Editors. Support Poem-a-Day.  

If you have any questions about Poem-a-Day, visit our Poem-a-Day FAQ.

Previous Poems

Title Author Date
After Reading Kobayashi Issa’s The Spring of My Life On My 49th Birthday Dobby Gibson 04/21/2021
In her mostly white town, an hour from Rocky Mountain National Park, a black poet considers centuries of protests against racialized violence Camille T. Dungy 04/20/2021
Bobolink Didi Jackson 04/19/2021
Near the End of April William Stanley Braithwaite 04/18/2021
Venetian Siesta Joseph Millar 04/17/2021
I Never Wanted to Die Dorianne Laux 04/16/2021
Overlooking the Cortile David St. John 04/15/2021
Memory is Blood Soluble Brian Sneeden 04/14/2021
Pastoral Forrest Gander 04/13/2021
Grief Dream Carol Muske-Dukes 04/12/2021

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