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A weekly poem, read by the author.

"Ghazal of the Goats"

Click the arrow on the audio player to hear Teresa Cader read this poem. You can also download the recording or subscribe to Slate's Poetry Podcast on iTunes.



Not the lyric song of shepherds, my love
Bleats ungodly tunes in private. My unlovely

Irish tongue, Polish doom, a marriage made
For goats to butt heads by day, by night, love.

Goat Man Ches McCartney wed a Spanish
knife-thrower, his near-miss lethal lover.

In my act, you don't flinch, duck, scrape, or bow.
It appears you're an idiot for love.

Ches took to the road with a herd of goats,
A two-legged one who hopped—now that's love.

Dressed in goat skins, Crusoe and the Good Book
In tow, he preached smelly riffs on God's love.

I preach, too, you say: Once would be enough.
Finnegan wakes in my blood. My love,

Thor's chariot was pulled by two Norse goats
He ate each night. He saved the bones, by love

Restored them whole each day. As I do you.
Teresa
means harvest, my love.

.

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Teresa Cader is the author of Guests, The Paper Wasp, and History of Hurricanes (2009). She teaches poetry in the low-residency MFA program at Lesley University.
For Slate's poetry submission guidelines, click here.

Click here to visit Robert Pinsky's Favorite Poem Project site.

Click here for an archive of discussions about poems with Robert Pinsky in "the Fray," Slate's reader forum.
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