We were sitting on the couch in the dark
talking about first pets, when I told him how,
as a girl, I kept a blue and white parakeet I let
fly around the house and, sometimes, outside,
where he'd land on the branches of pine
and eucalyptus, balancing between seedpods
and spines. Only, while I was telling it,
my companion began to stroke, very lightly,
the indent of my palm, the way you do when you're
sitting in the dark with someone you've never kissed
but have thought about kissing. And I told him
how my bird would sit on a high branch and sing,
loudly, at the wonder of it—the whole, green world—
while he traced the inside of my arm with his fingers,
opening another world of greenery and vines,
twisting toward the sun. I loved that bird for his singing,
and also for the way his small body, lifted skyward,
made my life larger. And then it was lip-to-lip,
a bramble, and it was hard to say who was who—
thumb to cheek to chest. The whole ravening.
When I told him I did not clip my bird's wings,
I was talking about hunger. When he pressed me
hard against the back of the couch, named a litany
of things he'd do to me, I wanted them all.
I, too, have loved to live in a body. To feel the way
it lifts up the octaves of sky, cells spiraling
through smoke and mist, cumulus and stratus,
into that wild blue. And though I knew
there was always a hawk somewhere in the shadows
ready to snatch his heart in its claws, still,
I couldn't help letting that parakeet free.
from the journalNEW OHIO REVIEW
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Aerial view directly down a long spiral staircase

Carol Rumens discusses the work of Charlotte Mew; in particular, the poem "Not for That City, Mew's low-key riposte to religion's grandiose visions of the afterlife.  "Formally, Mew often experimented with long, prose-like lines, and varieties of indentation, bringing a prose writer’s sense of larger rhythmic possibilities into the poem as dramatic lyric."

via THE GUARDIAN
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What Sparks Poetry:
Tracy Zeman on Susan Howe's "The Nonconformist's Memorial"


Howe’s techniques create an altered world that a reader can step into and attempt to decipher. In the act of reading, we enter into the act of making. I loved the mystery in that process and the reader-work involved as we participate in the unraveling of established histories and the un-silencing that results....She both implicates the existing narrative and reconfigures it to create space for others."
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