COOKIE POLICY - PRIVACY POLICY by IUBENDA Questo sito utilizza cookie per funzioni proprie. Se non acconsenti all'uso dei cookie ti preghiamo di abbandonare il sito.Se continui nella navigazione o clicchi su un elemento della pagina accetti il loro utilizzo. Our website uses cookies. If you do not consent to the use of these cookies please leave this website. Scrolling this page or clicking on any of its elements you will consent to the use of cookie. Politique de confidentialité de immagine.poesia.over-blog.it/ Pour recevoir des informations sur les Données personnelles, les objectifs et les parties avec qui elles sont partagées, veuillez contacter le Propriétaire. Si vous désirez recevoir de plus amples informations et souhaitez vous renseignez sur vos droits, vous pouvez aussi consulter la version complète de cette Politique de Confidentialité en cliquant sur le lien au bas de cette page. Coordonnées Propriétaire et Responsable du traitement Lidia Chiarelli, Torino Courriel de contact du Propriétaire : immagine.poesia@gmail.com Dernière mise à jour : 31 mai 2018 iubenda héberge le présent contenu et ne collecte que les Données personnelles strictement nécessaires à sa fourniture Voir la Politique de confidentialité complète Politique de Confidentialité générée avec iubenda Immagine & Poesia is the international artistic literary movement founded in Torino, Italy, in 2007, under the Patronage of the late Aeronwy Thomas, daughter of Dylan Thomas.The Movement is open to artists, poets and music composers who want to experiment moments of “Cross Fertilization”.Since its inception, Immagine & Poesia has continued to grow. Hundreds of poets and artists from all over the world have participated, and the movement now reaches international audiences.
18 Giugno 2012
“God, humans are creatures of habit,”
I say to no one particular,
myself, the man who calls himself my
lover, behind me in the next room.
The way we laugh when we hit the switch
knowing there’s no electricity,
or turn the faucet to wash our hands
anyway, plumber downstairs, no flow.
Do what you’ve always done, and you’ll get
what you’ve always gotten. This is our
homily these days, and I believe
it. God, humans, creatures, here we
sit in the cosmic chain of being,
him in the next room, me at my work.
He is reading, quietly, poems
that make him moan. This is sweet because
they are my own. He, of course, is not.
There is a woman some miles away
who yet is here with us, a corner
of the room and our consciences just
for her. Seems I’ve always been the third
angle of the triangle, the heart-
shaped chaos created by a yes
born of a no. And what I now know
is I want him alone, the slow moan
mine, no more shadowed eyes peering
from corners, through blinds. Do what I’ve done
always? always, I’ll trace clandestine skin.
—Moira Egan