O, Sadness Immaculate by Jay Hopler
Looking at them—; it's like bleeding. So I don't look at them.
O, Sadness Immaculate
by Jay Hopler
The women in Rome are so beautiful It's like being beaten to death in slow motion Looking at them—; it's like bleeding. So I don't look at them. I look at the parakeets nesting in the blood Orange trees, the moon rising behind some ancient something-or-other, the first few stars. From my window, I can see the house Where Galileo invented the telescope. I wonder what he was thinking That night, that night he first searched Heaven. I wonder what it was He was trying not to see.
First published in The Abridged History of Rainfall (McSweeney’s, 2016).
Dear friends, we're trying out something a little new today:
an addition to this newsletter for paid subscribers in the form of an Editor's Note after the poem. We'll talk about what specifically caught our attention about the poem in terms of craft and aesthetics or share some context about the poet themselves to deepen your reading experience, just as we might if we were reading this poem together over coffee.
For now, as we try this out, these Editor's Notes may be sporadic, but if it turns out our readers really do value and enjoy this, we'll make it a regular feature alongside each of our daily poems (which of course always remain free to read!).
Ultimately, we’re an indie, reader-supported, ad-free magazine that doesn’t have any outside funding or grants. We don’t charge general submission fees and we pay the poets we publish. Your readership and kindness means the world to us!
Now, without further ado, our first…