DANIELLE COLLOBERT
profiles and mirror, I work
on the horizon
explore and don’t ever return from there
without knowing if I’ll dare the paradox:
to transform the scroll, the flame
the synthesis
no text will have me, I agree to it
convoke (at least your face)
without which I turn in slow motion too
fluid not to flow/ a drop
here (the fiction) the spine when
eyelashes softly writing material
tension will build the way your shoulder
vertically dazzled me I pursue
salt conquest sleep/ a few words:
I want to revise this sequence
us naked knees enlaced in a word
radically
—marilyn hacker
Danielle Collobert 1940–1978
rostrenen, france
C
ollobert’s family took part in the Resistance during World War II. Her
work, largely contained in her notebooks, details her commitment to
political activism and to her writing. She was associated with the
National Liberation Front in Algeria during that country’s war for independence.
Collobert moved to Paris at the age of nineteen. A translation of her notebooks
appeared in Zazil #1, and her poetry appeared in the journal Tripwire #2. She
committed suicide in 1978. Principal works: Cahiers, 1956–1978; Meurtre, 1964; Il
donc, 1976.