Even as we lived in certain rooms (lamp
on that table, the curtains' tassel-ties,
antique clock, framed Audubon)
things were shifting, taking place
in some sheerly other dimension
we couldn't know, our lives taken as if by a caravan
rocking at breakneck speed through landscapes sped
to all-and-nothing: falling trees become saplings newly
sprung through snow and butterflies; October's
brilliant leaves adrift over February's crocus—
and that caravan, is it gypsies, soothsayers, thieves?
wearing our own quick-change faces, driving
what unseen horses, harrows, houses?
as the lamp on this table flickers, and this
chair and this cup dim—
it isn't death I'm bringing up but another
derangement: something out of the Brothers Grimm
dislimning the known, the held world,
with abandon we don't see the way
we can't see the hour-hand in its creep.
Why is it, then, we never took photographs of rooms
we lived in, their tackle and trim, their blurring
breath; never captured the roses on the vase
by the stairs, the bed with its jigsaw quilt,
noon's slab of sunlight on a hand-hooked rug?—
though a corner of kitchen may show in a snapshot
of a birthday cake, or part of a sofa
with the baby on it, or a fireplace somebody's
leaning against—but no whole, no context full
of the matter we made our days among—
and even if we had those shadows, we'd nevertheless
have lost how it felt to turn at the banister, pass
the hall mirror, to walk through the air
of that doorway—
the caravan speeding away
with what memory can't hold
which is still, after all, everything
that already was not there even as we sat
together at dinner with everyone caught
in the bright flash, our glasses raised.
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Spring Feature 2012
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Feature
- Poets in Person Claudia Emerson and husband Kent Ippolito in Fredericksburg, VA
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Music
- Cornelius Eady "I Need a Train", words and music by Cornelius Eady
- Claudia Emerson "Shot Her Dead", words and music by Claudia Emerson and Kent Ippolito
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Poetry
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Book Review
- David Rigsbee reviews Secure The Shadow
by Claudia Emerson
- David Rigsbee reviews Secure The Shadow