A Language
Copyright © 2011 by Susan Stewart. Originally published in the July/August 2011 issue of Poetry magazine. Used with permission by the author.
Copyright © 2011 by Susan Stewart. Originally published in the July/August 2011 issue of Poetry magazine. Used with permission by the author.
As from dark orchard leaves, from quiet scripts where each shape sends its tendril reaching— circle and line, the swaddled bud, the petiole sprung, an envelope tendered. By a window, the infant turns, rooting toward the breast, sun-lit, the mother humming. (Those far things, sources of power and regret, cliffs and waves, continue at a distance.) Here you’ll find a name scrawled in the bark— last words, left to chance and strangers. There, the black ant, burdened by a crumb, and the weight of her lacquered armor, cross
The problem was how to begin with the end
and then it turned out there were two ends:
the end within the continuing
that, continuing, enveloped
the end. You passed yourself
coming and going, went through
one loop, then another,
what was behind drawn
through at a
slide until
it rose
before you, sprung.
Tangle like a bramble,
like a rose. Start,
start again against
the tight-
ening. A knife
could give up
on patience, but you
were born among
the dull and
kind, who wait
a homely word:
a plosive, a long cry, a quiet stop, a silent letter
like a storm and the end of a storm,
the kind brewing
at the top of a pine,
(torn hair, bowed spirits, and,
later, straightened shoulders)
who’s who of the stirred and stirred up:
musicians, revolutionaries, pines.
A coniferous tree with needle-shaped leaves.
Suffering or trouble; there’s a pin inside.