Golden Hour

Jennifer Polson Peterson

When sidelong hours reach deepinto the house, objects turnunbearably distinct and I thinkof girlhood, how the sinking golden lighthad to be seized, like the lastmouthful of soda in a warm can sharedwith my sister. Whether I wanted to or not,I climbed higher in the tree, higherthan I even liked, to watch the back doorwhere my mother would appearand call me in. For years nowa supper made by someone elseis all I want, but this late sunkeeps pressing in. The linen chairbeside the window looks moresalmon-hued and woven nowthan at noon. And the not-chairstretches long beside it. Shadowssharpen and themselves becomeobjects filling the room. A child wakesdown the hall. Light gathers on the facesof ranunculus in a mantle vase,browning and collapsingin their centers. I think I have beensad every afternoon of my life.Outside a child runs in the grass.Soon I will appear and call her to me.

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Jennifer Polson Peterson is a poet living in South Mississippi. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Radar, Beloit Poetry Journal, Image, Apricity, and elsewhere. She is a PhD student at the University of Southern Mississippi’s Center for Writers and the author of a chapbook, Must Resemble Leisure, published by Seven Kitchens Press.

Cover of Colorado Review summer 2022

Summer 2022

Fort Collins, Colorado

The Center for Literary Publishing
Colorado State University

Director & Editor in Chief
Stephanie G’Schwind

Poetry Editors
Donald Revell
Sasha Steensen
Camille T. Dungy
Matthew Cooperman

Associate Poetry Editor
Felicia Zamora

Launched in 1956 (with the first issue featuring work by Langston Hughes, William Carlos Williams, E. E. Cummings, Henry Miller, Bertolt Brecht, and Mark van Doren), Colorado Review is a national literary journal featuring contemporary fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and book reviews. Each issue is approximately 200 pages. Published three times a year, CR has a circulation of approximately 1,100, is carried by university and public libraries across the country, and is distributed by Kent News to independent bookstores. The journal receives over 9,000 manuscript submissions each academic year.

Colorado Review is committed to the publication of contemporary creative writing. We are equally interested in work by both new and established writers. CR does not publish genre fiction, nor do we subscribe to a particular literary philosophy or school of poetry or fiction.

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