More poetry for April
Apr. 24th, 2020 11:44 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The Way West
by Raphael Kosek
My daughter is driving
across the continent, eating cheddar
in Wisconsin, waking to a cougar's yellow
rasp, sleeping tentless
in a corn field where a mysterious
insect leaves a sore story of welts
over her face, her neck—
she is off my radar, and it feels like
part of me is floating off the map,
past the flannel of sleep, the safety
of novels—I hear the wind over her phone,
constant. The wind, her voice
informs me, never stops blowing in South Dakota
where the Black Hills are not really black
but green and grey like Cezanne's mountains.
Her hair glistens with a mid-American
sweat I have never felt, her car
runs into the different hours
of a different night. We have
lost the clock between us, the familiar
gone strange. Prairie, so flat, she says,
you can see the sun for a long time.
I feel something flatten out between us—
and ease into a rhythm where the plains
of her life, of mine, drift
buoyant, open, rising without words,
hours, or habits—
new country.
“The Way West” by Raphael Kosek, from American Mythology. © Brick Road Poetry Press.
by Raphael Kosek
My daughter is driving
across the continent, eating cheddar
in Wisconsin, waking to a cougar's yellow
rasp, sleeping tentless
in a corn field where a mysterious
insect leaves a sore story of welts
over her face, her neck—
she is off my radar, and it feels like
part of me is floating off the map,
past the flannel of sleep, the safety
of novels—I hear the wind over her phone,
constant. The wind, her voice
informs me, never stops blowing in South Dakota
where the Black Hills are not really black
but green and grey like Cezanne's mountains.
Her hair glistens with a mid-American
sweat I have never felt, her car
runs into the different hours
of a different night. We have
lost the clock between us, the familiar
gone strange. Prairie, so flat, she says,
you can see the sun for a long time.
I feel something flatten out between us—
and ease into a rhythm where the plains
of her life, of mine, drift
buoyant, open, rising without words,
hours, or habits—
new country.
“The Way West” by Raphael Kosek, from American Mythology. © Brick Road Poetry Press.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-24 05:45 pm (UTC)