Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
Poetry Makes Nothing Happen
by Omar Sabbagh

Beirut
I walk through this apartment
in West Beirut. It’s a wide and graceful space
and the very air feels like it’s lined with lace.
It’s a privilege, after all, to be, or to feel, safe.
The whole night through the aggressor
has bombed, picking and culling-at life, dear life —
as though it weren’t the unsung riddle that it is,
as though it were a pat and simple thing. Descent
becomes the new arousal here, as we wake
and keen and mourn the violent passing of those
we never knew, those we were never meant
to meet, those more unfortunate, weaker, poorer —
lives that were just as much like brimming mints
of riches as ours are. Poetry makes nothing happen
of course: except to hold a frail and shivering light
above the white blanket of a page, fighting the fight
with wordy weapons — used to unveil the blanketing night
that others, elsewhere, have no more words for.

 

Omar Sabbagh is a very widely published poet, writer and critic. Poetry Makes Nothing Happen is taken from Night Settles Upon The City, a profoundly reflective and evocative collection that blends personal experience with the brutal realities of life today in a war-torn Beirut. It is published by Daraja Press.

Ad slot F - article bottom
More from this author
Gig review / 5 May 2024
5 May 2024
MICHAL BONCZA reviews Cairokee gig at the London Barbican
Culture / 29 April 2024
29 April 2024
Opinion / 15 March 2024
15 March 2024
MICHAL BONCZA rounds up a series of images designed to inspire women
Book Review / 25 January 2024
25 January 2024
If 17th-century Dutch art is your thing this must be your book, believes MICHAL BONCZA
Similar stories
21st Century Poetry: / 25 September 2024
25 September 2024
by JENNY MITCHELL
21st Century Poetry: / 19 June 2024
19 June 2024
by JOHN GLENDAY
21st Century Poetry / 17 June 2024
17 June 2024
by Jemima Foxtrot
21st Century Poetry: / 3 April 2024
3 April 2024
by AMIR DARWISH