Good Mare
Sara Ellen Fowler
                  That I was
                  your simple bit

                                        a bride of pressure and prayer you ground
                                        grinding down


                  The one who taps your teeth to get you to open


—to be led be led
                                      let me in
                                                          this psychic adumbration

                                hitch a band of chances   the old tack chiming a hymn's cadence

Whose presence in the grain pail sweet    warm, warm enough, you bow your head
                                                                          and tug the leather lead in whose hands—

                                               eternal cipher under tongue metallic rub
                                               by the snaggy corners of your mouth

                                                                 I, your simple bit

I did not abandon you
when the barn burned with contempt


                  I slipped from the hayloft
—your whinnies, cinders, the vicious air—

                                                                                         I screened your eyes
                                                                                                with a wet scarf
                                                                                                        to guide you through
                                                                                                                  the falling rafters
from the book TWO SIGNATURES / University of Utah Press
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Energetic valor. Temperature and texture. Power, emergency, and reclamation. Across my poetry and sculpture practices, my preoccupations have been consistent. This poem opens my first book, and it is part-memo, part-invocation. It was the last one written for the manuscript. Happily, my soul titled this poem for me. It colors our endeavors, as she bade me speak.

Sara Ellen Fowler on "Good Mare"
A color illustration of three wilting flowers in a jar against a blue and black background.
"I Would Follow This Poem to Hell and Back"

Critic A.O. Scott marvels at Gwendolyn Brooks: "Here’s a poem about patience, about self-control, about the need to conserve your energy and constrain your desire. Fittingly enough, it’s a proper old-school sonnet, orderly and elegant: 14 lines of iambic pentameter, crisply punctuated, with syllables cut to measure....This poem is also the opposite of everything I’ve just described. It’s as wild a piece of verse as you’ll ever read, seething and unruly in spite of its ostensibly sensible theme and painstakingly precise decorum. A sonnet at war with itself."

via THE NEW YORK TIMES
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Cover of Matthew Copperman's book, the atmosphere is not a perfume it is odorless
What Sparks Poetry: Matthew Cooperman on Reading Prose

"How will we spend our days? How will we attend to our rapidly accelerating planet? One habit of response is to read bracing prose, and for me, it’s often “the consolations of philosophy,” to quote an excellent recent example by Alain de Botton. From the Affective Turn to the Queering of Nature, Object Oriented Ontology to Anthropocene Studies, there’s an incredible florescence of philosophical writing going on internationally, as if climate change has triggered all our cells to wake up."
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