Mrs. Dickinson Waits in the Car
Dawn Potter
My Mother does
not care for thought—
Emily
Dickinson
A few meager
stars, a hazy moon
brighter than old Kentuck,
and a bulge of frost spooned
across the windshield like a
plucked,
flash-frozen
chick. Into this arctic
chariot, the heater chafes and
spouts
its idiot vows. Yes, I lied about Kentuck.
No doubt, it’s glowing like all
get-out,
like a pair of
gibbous moons, like molten
honey dripped into a summer lake.
Blame art, then: I’ve been soaking up Bolton’s
poems, and now I’m acting like a
fake
southerner, which
is to say gothically
depressed while making love to
every rum-
soaked predicate I meet. Treat gothically
as a ringer for New England numb.
Today a friendly
rube lauded my skill
at prosy contemplation, but what a
crock.
Call a heart a spade: call me a fading, moody kill-
joy with a romance eye for loss and
schlock.
The car fan
chatters hopelessly; newsmen
chant wind-chill rates and hockey
stats.
Like any hausfrau I fret over loaves in the oven,
socks on the line, carboys of milk,
and ruinous vats
of soup. There
they burn or boil.
Here I dally in this wrapper-strewn
capsule,
this (laugh with me!) bell jar. Can I stand loyal
to her, cruel queen of diction, and
also rule
my roost, my squat
piratical outpost?
I shiver; I prop my tome of poems
against the cruiser’s plastic wheel. I boast
that they age for me: these jeroboams
of syntax, these
sherry cups of rage.
Yet these tired hands; yet these
cold feet.
Go ahead: remind me to shut up, to flip the page,
to change the station, to bleat
of
Mother’s lonely vigil.
I’m not proud of my idle arrogance.
Meanwhile, the rye loaf chars and the milk spills.
They’re
out of my ken, for a hatful of minutes.
Let
me claim to be oracular.
“Poetry is not like reasoning,”
urges Shelley.
And I reply: “nothing in particular”
is
the maiden speech of every tragedy.
[forthcoming in Same Old Story (CavanKerry Press, 2014)]
4 comments:
Holy smokes.
I love this poem.
Do you really? It's been rejected a whole lotta times. I finally decided to give up and post it here. I was beginning to think I'd made a mistake about it.
OMG, the juxtaposition of the erudite and the mundane results in a tension that is masterful.
I want to grow up to write this well.
You are not wrong. I'm even duly impressed with the line spacing.
In short (too late) WOW.
I must say I'm slightly stunned. I mean, I have a fondness for this poem but until today it has shown no signs of interesting any other reader on earth.
I got lucky with you two--
Thank you very much.
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