Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Once again, I'm posting the poem I wrote on the day after Bush won his second term. Hope it makes you feel at least slightly better about last night's results.

Exile

Dawn Potter

On the morning I left

my country, sunlight


thrust through the clouds

the way it does after a raw


autumn rain, sky stippled

with blue like a young mackerel,


leaf puddles blinking silver,

sweet western wind gusting


fresh as paint, and a flock

of giddy hens rushing pell-mell


into the mud; and I knelt

in the sodden grass and gathered


my acres close, like starched

skirts; I shook out the golden


tamaracks, and a scuffle of jays

tumbled into my spread apron;


I tucked a weary child into each coat

pocket, wrapped the quiet


garden neat as a shroud

round my lover’s warm heart,


cut the sun from its moorings

and hung it, burnished and fierce,


over my shield arm—a ponderous

weight to ferry so far across the waste—


though long nights ahead, I’ll bless

its brave and crazy fire.


[from How the Crimes Happened (CavanKerry Press, 2010)]

2 comments:

Jenne' R. Andrews said...

spectacular poem, Dawn. I have a title poem up and a new poem at http://parolavivace.blogspot.com... and words to wise at Loquaciously Yours....best J

Dawn Potter said...

Thanks, Jenne. I'll wander over to your blogs and see what you're up to. . . .