Poem
Marianne Boruch
THE MAP
THE MAP
THE MAP
The lines aren't really boundaries, notthe 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.
© 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
THE MAP
The lines aren't really boundaries, notthe 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.
From: Poetry, Vol. 188, No. 3, June
THE MAP
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