Poem
D.A. Powell
cruel, cruel summer
cruel, cruel summer
cruel, cruel summer
either the postagestamp-bright inflorescence of wild mustardor the drab tassel of prairie smoke, waving its dirty garments
either the low breeze through the cracked window
or houseflies and drawn blinds to spare us the calid sun
one day commands the next to lie down, to scatter: we’re done
with allegiance, devotion, the malicious idea of what’s eternal
picture the terrain sunk, return of the inland sea, your spectacle
your metaphor, the scope of this twiggy dominion pulled under
crest and crest, wave and cloud, the thunder blast and burst of swells
this is the sum of us: brief sneezeweed, brief yellow blaze put out
so little, your departure, one plunk upon the earth’s surface,
one drop to bind the dust, a little mud, a field of mud
the swale gradually submerged, gradually forgotten
and that is all that is to be borne of your empirical trope:
first, a congregated light, the brilliance of a meadowland in bloom
and then the image must fail, as we must fail, as we
graceless creatures that we are, unmake and befoul our beds
don’t tell me deluge. don’t tell me heat, too damned much heat
© 2008, D.A. Powell
From: Poetry, Vol. 191, No. 4, January
Publisher: Poetry, Chicago
From: Poetry, Vol. 191, No. 4, January
Publisher: Poetry, Chicago
Poems
Poems of D.A. Powell
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cruel, cruel summer
either the postagestamp-bright inflorescence of wild mustardor the drab tassel of prairie smoke, waving its dirty garments
either the low breeze through the cracked window
or houseflies and drawn blinds to spare us the calid sun
one day commands the next to lie down, to scatter: we’re done
with allegiance, devotion, the malicious idea of what’s eternal
picture the terrain sunk, return of the inland sea, your spectacle
your metaphor, the scope of this twiggy dominion pulled under
crest and crest, wave and cloud, the thunder blast and burst of swells
this is the sum of us: brief sneezeweed, brief yellow blaze put out
so little, your departure, one plunk upon the earth’s surface,
one drop to bind the dust, a little mud, a field of mud
the swale gradually submerged, gradually forgotten
and that is all that is to be borne of your empirical trope:
first, a congregated light, the brilliance of a meadowland in bloom
and then the image must fail, as we must fail, as we
graceless creatures that we are, unmake and befoul our beds
don’t tell me deluge. don’t tell me heat, too damned much heat
From: Poetry, Vol. 191, No. 4, January
cruel, cruel summer
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