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Elf owl, cactus wren, fruit flies
incubating
In the only womb they'll ever recognize.
Shadow for the sand rat, spines
And barbary ribs clenched with green wax.
Seven thousand thorns, each a water slide,
A wooden tongue licking the air dry.
Inside, early morning mist captured intact,
The taste of drizzle sucked
And sunsplit. Whistle
Of the red-tailed hawk at midnight, rush
Of the leaf-nosed bat, the soft slip
Of fog easing through sand held in tandem.
Counting, the vertigo of its attitudes
Across the evening; in the wood of its latticed bones--
The eye sockets of every saint of thirst;
In the gullet of each night-blooming flower--the crucifix
Of the arid.
In its core, a monastery of cells, a brotherhood
Of electrons, a column of expanding darkness
Where matter migrates and sparks whorl,
And travel has no direction, where distance
Bends backward over itself and the ascension
Of Venus, the stability of Polaris, are crucial.
The cactus, containing
Whatever can be said to be there,
Plus the measurable tremble of its association
With all those who have been counting.
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PATTIANN ROGERS was born in Joplin, Missouri, and
graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a BA from the University of Missouri in
1961. She received a Master of Arts from the University of Houston in
1981. She has taught at the University of Texas, the University of
Montana, Washington University of St. Louis, and Mercer University as the
Ferrol Sams Distinguished Writer-in-Residence. She taught in the Creative
Writing Program during the spring semesters, 1993 to 1997, at the
University of Arkansas. She is the mother of two sons and a
daughter-in-law and lives with her husband, a retired geophysicist, in
Colorado.
A new book of poems, entitled Generations, will be
published by Viking in the Penguin Group in the summer, 2004. Rogers has published ten books, most recently Song of the World
Becoming, New and Collected Poems, 1981 - 2001 (Milkweed Editions).
This book contains all of her poems previously published in books, plus
forty new poems, and line and title indexes, It was a finalist for the LA
Times Book Award and was named an Editor's Choice, Top of the List by
Booklist.
Her sixth book, Firekeeper, New and Selected Poems was chosen by
Publishers Weekly as one of the Best Books Published in 1994 and was one
of five finalists for the Lenore Marshall Award given by the Academy of
American Poets for the most outstanding book of poetry published in the
United States in 1994. It also received the Natalie Ornish Poetry Award
from the Texas Institute of Letters.
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