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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Li-Young Lee
Li-Young Lee
Li-Young Lee was born in 1957 in Jakarta, Indonesia, to Chinese parents....
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FURTHER READING
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by Stanley Kunitz
Birdcall
by Alicia Suskin Ostriker
In California During the Gulf War
by Denise Levertov
Our Bodies Break Light
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Reasons To Survive November
by Tony Hoagland
The Bear
by Galway Kinnell
Travelling Against
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What is Broken is What God Blesses
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You Can't Survive on Salt Water
by Kalamu ya Salaam
Zulu
by Jen Benka
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Immigrant Blues

 
by Li-Young Lee

People have been trying to kill me since I was born,
a man tells his son, trying to explain
the wisdom of learning a second tongue.

It's the same old story from the previous century
about my father and me.

The same old story from yesterday morning
about me and my son.

It's called "Survival Strategies
and the Melancholy of Racial Assimilation."

It's called "Psychological Paradigms of Displaced Persons,"

called "The Child Who'd Rather Play than Study."

Practice until you feel 
the language inside you, says the man. 

But what does he know about inside and outside,
my father who was spared nothing
in spite of the languages he used?

And me, confused about the flesh and soul,
who asked once into a telephone,
Am I inside you? 

You're always inside me, a woman answered, 
at peace with the body's finitude, 
at peace with the soul's disregard
of space and time.

Am I inside you? I asked once 
lying between her legs, confused
about the body and the heart.

If you don't believe you're inside me, you're not,
she answered, at peace with the body's greed,
at peace with the heart's bewilderment.

It's an ancient story from yesterday evening

called "Patterns of Love in Peoples of Diaspora,"

called "Loss of the Homeplace 
and the Defilement of the Beloved,"

called "I Want to Sing but I Don’t Know Any Songs."






From Behind My Eyes by Li-Young Lee. Copyright © 2008 by Li-Young Lee. Reprinted by permission of W.W. Norton. All rights reserved.
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