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Elegy: In Coherent Light
In memory of two English poets, Matt Simpson and Michael Murphy, d. 2009


Teach-cheap, teach-cheap, teach-cheap, teach-cheap
Sparrows are plying their chisels in the summer ivy,
Chipping the seconds spark by spark out of the hours.
I read in each whistling chip the sun’s holography.
My brain’s a film, I’m made of timed exposures,
And pounding my ears and eyes with waves of light—
These animate flakes, these pictures I call sight.

But now you’re out of the picture, no one can keep
Coherent sightings of you, except in language.
All the warm rhetoric is wrong. Death isn’t sleep.
Faith in eternal love is love’s indulgence.
I prize what you wrote and meet you in what I write.
We still keep house in a living tenement of words.
Pull down their walls of ivy, and you kill the birds.

Notes:
*coherent adj. 4. Physics. (of two or more waves) having the same frequency and the same phase or fixed phase difference: coherent light. Collins Dictionary of the English Language.

holography n. the practice of exposing a film to light reflected from an object or objects and to a beam of coherent light; when the patterns on the film are illuminated by the coherent light a three dimensional image (a hologram) is produced. Ibid.

“Every bit of a hologram contains information about the whole scene. So you can snip it into pieces, and [in each piece] see the original scene.” the Observer, 15 May 1966, quoted in Oxford English Dictionary.


Anne Stevenson (died September 14, 2020)

Source: Poetry (July/August 2010)
[identity profile] duathir.livejournal.com

Vertigo

Mind led body
to the edge of the precipice.
They stared in desire
at the naked abyss.
If you love me, said mind,
take that step into silence.
If you love me, said body,
turn and exist.

by Anne Stevenson

[identity profile] aria-muse.livejournal.com
Consider the adhesiveness of things
     to the ghosts that prized them,
the “olden days” of birthday spoons,
    and silver napkin rings.
Too carelessly I opened
    that velvet drawer of heirlooms
There lay my grandmother’s soul
begging under veils of tarnish to be brought back whole.

She who was always a climate in herself,
    who refused to vanish
as the nineteen-hundreds grew older and louder,
    and the wars worse,
and her grandchildren, bigger and ruder
    in her daughter’s house.
How completely turned around
her lavender world became, how upside down.

And how much, under her “flyaway” hair,
    she must have suffered,
sitting there ignored by dinner guests
    hour after candlelit hour,
rubbed out, like her initials on the silverware,
    eating little, passing bread,
until the wine’s flood, the smoke’s blast,
the thunderous guffaws at last roared her to bed.

In her tiny garden of confidence,
    wasted she felt, and furious.
She fled to church, but Baby Jesus
    had grown out of his manger.
She read of Jews in the New Haven Register
    gassed or buried alive.
Every night, at the wheel of an ambulance,
she drove and drove, not knowing how to drive.

She died in ’55, paralyzed, helpless.
    Her no man’s land survived.
I light my own age with a spill
    from her distress. And there it is,
her dream, my heirloom, my drive downhill
    at the wheel of the last bus,
the siren’s wail, the smoke, the sickly smell.
The drawer won’t shut again. It never will.

March 2025

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