Thursday Short Poem: Atwood’s “Heartless”

As anyone who loves her books knows, few writers indeed have the powers of description that Margaret Atwood possesses. Those powers are on display in her poetry as well.

Heartless

Some people sell their blood. You sell your heart.
It was either that or the soul.
The hard part is getting the damn thing out.
A kind of twisting motion, like shucking an oyster,
your spine a wrist,
and then, hup! it’s in your mouth.
You turn yourself partially inside out
like a sea anemone coughing a pebble.
There’s a broken plop, the racket
of fish guts into a pail,
and there it is, a huge glistening deep-red clot
of the still-alive past, whole on the plate.
It gets passed around. It’s slippery. It gets dropped,
but also tasted. Too coarse, says one. Too salty.
Too sour, says another, making a face.
Each one is an instant gourmet,
and you stand listening to all this
in the corner, like a newly hired waiter,
your diffident, skilful hand on the wound hidden
deep in your shirt and chest,
shyly, heartless.

4 Responses to “Thursday Short Poem: Atwood’s “Heartless””


  1. 1 The Gonzman

    I am not heartless.

    Why, I have the heart of an innocent child.

    In a jar.

    On my desk.

  2. 2 Hugo Schwyzer

    That’s good, Gonz. Thanks!

  3. 3 The Gonzman

    Eh - it was either Robert Bloch or Harlan Ellison’s first.

    But it’s a funny what bears repeating.

  4. 4 galina

    I love Margaret Atwood with all my heart…
    Your blog rocks my world :)

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