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Betty Adcock |
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Betty Adcock's sixth collection from LSU
Press, Slantwise, appeared in March 2008. Her work
has received the Poets' Prize, the North Carolina Medal
for Literature, the Texas Institute of Letters Prize, two
Pushcart Prizes and several fellowships including a
Guggenheim Fellowship in Poetry. She lives in Raleigh,
NC with her jazz musician husband Don and teaches
in the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers.
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Photography I
1880
Here they are handwritten in old light.
How precisely in that brown sun's script
they bend at the waist in lace and cream
ruffles, in wide hats and wind-lifted
ribbons, small flags stopped in their drift.
The tall cane fence runs alongside then.
The summerhouse slumbers in a corner
of this one square window into a century
vanished so long that another has opened
and closed its slow shutter since
this spring or summer (trees leafed and serving
the moment) was caught, held ghost
of my great-grandfather's deer park,
folly of a gentleman farmer, his ladies
haunting the half grown fawns
who put up their heads to be stroked
pets, adored by the sun and the soft
hands of the women, a strict loveliness
in the confining. Everything's
here, clouds like smudges of smoke,
even smoke, small threads of it pulled
faintly from the unseen chimney
of one of the rough cabins culled
out of the frame, out of this iconography
addressed to the future. The women
are too small to have faces. They won't
look up to warn us, secreted
in their voluminous clothes, touched
by the era's sepia dew. That fence
holds
still
and the animal yet
cannot bolt.
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© 2008 The Cortland Review |
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