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The Academy of American Poets

April 12, 2008

Today's poem is from Alpha Zulu, just published by Ausable Press. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.

Read more about this book.


Also on Poets.org

Self-Portrait Poems
Self-Portrait as Miranda
by Geri Doran
Late Self-Portrait by Rembrandt
by Jane Hirshfield
Apart
by Louis Simpson and Marceline Desbordes-Valmore


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Alpha Zulu
by Gary Lilley

I know more people dead than people alive,
my insomniac answer to self-addressed prayers

is that in the small hours even God drinks alone.
My self-portrait; gray locks in the beard, red eyes

burning back in the mirror, the truths of grooves
and nicks on my face, one missing tooth.

I'm a man who's gathered too many addresses,
too many goodbyes. There's not much money

or time left to keep on subtracting from my life.
Except for needs I can pack everything I have

into my old black sea-bag. To all the bloods
I'll raise a bourbon, plant my elbow on the bar

and drink to the odds that one more shot
won't have me wearing a suit of blues.

I'm so exposed, with you all of me is at risk,
and if that's only one side of being in love

that's the one deep down that proves it.
Here you are sleeping with me, narcotic as night,

naked as an open hand, and the skinny of it is,
what makes you think I am afraid of this

when I once lived in a cave, moss on the cold wall,
all my bones scattered across the floor.