ISSUE 36
August 2007

Claire Fanger

 

Claire Fanger is a poet and medievalist who lives outside Durham, Ontario. As a medievalist she is best known for her work on medieval magic; she is editor of the essay collection Conjuring Spirits (Sutton Pub Ltd, 2000), and translator, with Siân Echard, of The Latin Verses in the Confessio Amantis (Colleagues Press, 1991). Her poems have appeared in the Beloit Poetry Journal, Poetry Daily, Disquieting Muses, and Red River Review.
Vienna, Midsummer: What She Wanted To Bring Back    


A date on a manuscript.
All the rubrics. All the glosses.
Not to feel she had done wrong
     
touching the warm surface of the folio
with a sweaty hand.
Erasmus. An embrace. What follows.

The distance between color as such
and the rose's inflorescence
and the pigeon's head. Its iridescence.

Its eye. The middle aged man
with his green shirt, standing
barefoot in the fountain.

The teenaged girls burbling
by the pool with its lip of water. The water.
The smell of box. (Pipi de chat.)

A seat in the shade. A writing space.
Vertigo. Hunger. The statue of a queen,
pensive and specular

veiled in stone draperies. The text beneath,
its heaviness and strangeness. Enfolding
silence, through which words come  

suddenly visible. The lettered movement
like lightning on the horizon. The page lit
with branched flame.

 

 

Claire Fanger: Poetry
Copyright ©2007 The Cortland Review Issue 36The Cortland Review