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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Mary Jo Bang
Mary Jo Bang
Mary Jo Bang was born in 1946 in Waynesville, Missouri and grew...
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FURTHER READING
Poems about Masks
A Peacock in Spring
by Joyelle McSweeney
Ars Poetica
by Eleanor Wilner
The Poem as Mask
by Muriel Rukeyser
We Wear the Mask
by Paul Laurence Dunbar
Poems about Tragedy
#4
by Jane Miller
A Wedding at Cana, Lebanon, 2007
by Tom Sleigh
Blood
by Naomi Shihab Nye
Falling
by James Dickey
Oklahoma City: The Aftermath
by Ira Sadoff
Shirt
by Robert Pinsky
Survivors--Found
by Joan Murray
What God Knew
by Marianne Boruch
You Can't Survive on Salt Water
by Kalamu ya Salaam
Related Prose
Poetic Form: Elegy
Other Elegies
Another Elegy
by Jericho Brown
By ways remote and distant waters sped (101)
by Gaius Valerius Catullus
Driven across many nations (101)
by Gaius Valerius Catullus
Elegy for my husband
by Toi Derricotte
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
by Thomas Gray
For the Union Dead
by Robert Lowell
Fugue of Death
by Paul Celan
In Memory of W. B. Yeats
by W. H. Auden
Lycidas
by John Milton
O Captain! My Captain!
by Walt Whitman
To An Athlete Dying Young
by A. E. Housman
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The Role of Elegy  
by Mary Jo Bang

The role of elegy is
To put a death mask on tragedy,
A drape on the mirror.
To bow to the cultural

Debate over the aesthetization of sorrow,
Of loss, of the unbearable
Afterimage of the once material.
To look for an imagined

Consolidation of grief
So we can all be finished
Once and for all and genuinely shut up
The cabinet of genuine particulars.

Instead there's the endless refrain
One hears replayed repeatedly
Through the just ajar door:
Some terrible mistake has been made.

What is elegy but the attempt
To rebreathe life
Into what the gone one once was
Before he grew to enormity.

Come on stage and be yourself,
The elegist says to the dead. Show them
Now—after the fact —
What you were meant to be:

The performer of a live song.
A shoe. Now bow.
What is left but this:
The compulsion to tell.

The transient distraction of ink on cloth
One scrubbed and scrubbed
But couldn't make less.
Not then, not soon.

Each day, a new caption on the cartoon
Ending that simply cannot be.
One hears repeatedly, the role of elegy is.



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From Elegy, Copyright © 2007 by Mary Jo Bang. Used by permission of Graywolf Press, Saint Paul, Minnesota. All rights reserved. www.graywolfpress.org
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