Poetry International Poetry International
Poem

Marianne Boruch

THE MAP

THE MAP

THE MAP

The lines aren't really boundaries, not
the edges of anything, the woman said.
I followed her hand,
                                      point A to point C.

B was all blue
and she skipped it. C was a dot
with a circle around it,
                                          a city, voices,

everyone talking at once,
a cacophony. It was quiet in the car
before I turned on the motor,
                                             map on the seat

open, a map so sure
of itself. And rivers,
no color at all, jagged,
                                         indifferent to land,

cross-angled, irrational
though of course, they
move toward a wide place,
                                                 a delta, slow

magnet, such water,
an ocean. I could sit staring for hours
like that, I tell myself now,
                                                 for hours,

an exaggeration that might
please a child who does
almost nothing for hours.
                                               But it did. It took

hours to cross, only
ten inches long in my car, ten inches
wide, square of busy
                                      exactitude. What I love—

the swatches of silence,
an inch, two inches, a bare spot,
pale yellow where
                                 nothing had happened.

In fact I drove
through a universe, fields,
their intricate
                          wildlife of insects

and beans, civilization of mice
and moth and corn, windfall,
the great trees
                           finally over in an instant.
Close

THE MAP

The lines aren't really boundaries, not
the edges of anything, the woman said.
I followed her hand,
                                      point A to point C.

B was all blue
and she skipped it. C was a dot
with a circle around it,
                                          a city, voices,

everyone talking at once,
a cacophony. It was quiet in the car
before I turned on the motor,
                                             map on the seat

open, a map so sure
of itself. And rivers,
no color at all, jagged,
                                         indifferent to land,

cross-angled, irrational
though of course, they
move toward a wide place,
                                                 a delta, slow

magnet, such water,
an ocean. I could sit staring for hours
like that, I tell myself now,
                                                 for hours,

an exaggeration that might
please a child who does
almost nothing for hours.
                                               But it did. It took

hours to cross, only
ten inches long in my car, ten inches
wide, square of busy
                                      exactitude. What I love—

the swatches of silence,
an inch, two inches, a bare spot,
pale yellow where
                                 nothing had happened.

In fact I drove
through a universe, fields,
their intricate
                          wildlife of insects

and beans, civilization of mice
and moth and corn, windfall,
the great trees
                           finally over in an instant.

THE MAP

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