Geoffrey Brock (born 1964) is an American poet and translator.
He received a Masters in Fine Arts from the University of Florida in 1998. He also holds a PhD in Comparative Literature from the University of Pennsylvania.
His poems have been published in Poetry Magazine, Paris Review, PN Review, New England Review, The Hudson Review, and The Best American Poetry 2007. He teaches poetry and translation in the graduate creative writing program at the University of Arkansas.
Brock is married to the writer Padma Viswanathan and they have two children.
His translations have received a number of prizes and fellowships, including the Academy of American Poets' Raiziss/de Palchi Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship. He received a poetry fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and a Stegner Fellowship from Stanford University.                
                Floodlights have flared on behind and above
              Where I sit in my public chair.
The lawn that had gradually darkened has brightened.
                
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                1. DELIRIUM, AFTER RIMBAUD
How many hours I kept
that vigil by your side—
                
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                It was so simple: you came back to me 
And I was happy. Nothing seemed to matter 
But that. That you had gone away from me 
And lived for days with him—it didn't matter.
                
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                By the time I recalled that it is also 
terrifying, we had gone too far into 
the charmed woods to return. It was then
                
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                Let's get this straight: Charles Graner   
is not America. America would never   
hold a knife to his wife's throat, then say 
when she woke that he was considering
                
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