Poem
Marianne Boruch
AFTER THE MOON
AFTER THE MOON
AFTER THE MOON
eclipsed itself, the rumor of darknesstrue, the whole radiant business
almost over, only a line,
an edge, like some
stray part of a machine
not one of us
can figure any more:
what it thrashed or cut, what it sewed
quietly together, what it scalded
or brought back from the dead. After this,
I came inside to sleep.
But it’s the moon still,
pale run of it shaping
the door closed against the half-lit hall.
The eye is its own
small flicker orbiting under the lid
a few hours.
Not so long,
bright rim,
giving up its genius
briefly, mountains under dark, craters
where someone, then no one
is walking.
© 2006, Marianne Boruch
From: Poetry, Vol. 188, No. 3, June
Publisher: Poetry, Chicago
From: Poetry, Vol. 188, No. 3, June
Publisher: Poetry, Chicago
Poems
Poems of Marianne Boruch
Close
AFTER THE MOON
eclipsed itself, the rumor of darknesstrue, the whole radiant business
almost over, only a line,
an edge, like some
stray part of a machine
not one of us
can figure any more:
what it thrashed or cut, what it sewed
quietly together, what it scalded
or brought back from the dead. After this,
I came inside to sleep.
But it’s the moon still,
pale run of it shaping
the door closed against the half-lit hall.
The eye is its own
small flicker orbiting under the lid
a few hours.
Not so long,
bright rim,
giving up its genius
briefly, mountains under dark, craters
where someone, then no one
is walking.
From: Poetry, Vol. 188, No. 3, June
AFTER THE MOON
Sponsors
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère