Close Talking: A Poetry Podcast

Episode #053 Carnegie Hall Rush Seats - Mary Karr

12.29.2018 - By Cardboard Box Productions, Inc.Play

Download our free app to listen on your phone

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

In this episode, Connor and Jack discuss Mary Karr's "Carnegie Hall Rush Seats." In the course of the conversation they also talk about big-R Romanticism, Calvinism, the Netflix program Chef's Table, and the quasi-mystical process behind the crafting of the world's finest classical instruments. Connor sticks up for the midwest, Jack's poetic preferences are laid bare, and a physical copy of the OED is consulted.

Read the poem below.

More on Mary Karr, here: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/mary-karr

Find us on facebook at: facebook.com/closetalking

Find us on twitter at: twitter.com/closetalking

You can always send us an e-mail with thoughts on this or any of our previous podcasts, as well as suggestions for future shows, at [email protected].

Carnegie Hall Rush Seats

By: Mary Karr

Whatever else the orchestra says,

the cello insists, You’re dying.

It speaks from the core

of the tree’s hacked-out heart,

shaped and smoothed like a woman.

Be glad you are not hard wood

yourself and can hear it.

Every day the cello is taken

into someone’s arms, taken between

spread legs and lured into

its shivering. The arm saws and

saws and all the sacred cries of saints

and demons issue from the carved cleft holes.

Like all of us, it aches, sending up moans

from the pit we balance on the edge of.

More episodes from Close Talking: A Poetry Podcast