Outpost of fish hawk and crow, one drowned oak, one white-blooming pear—Lodged in the craw of the hay marsh, Hag Island.The dock pilings and john-boat long rotten, house timbers sunk in the earth;Rust, foundation stone, and a garden plot of haggard herbs.Yarrow for bleeding, horehound for cough, catnip and boneset for fever,Pokeberry, foxglove, convolulus to drive off hag-ridden dreams.Mullein scepters, several, waist-high, faint green, each cool as a jarOf fireflies, glow—they must have been hers—hag tapers.Soaked in tallow, the spikes burn down to an acrid smolderOver a feast of winnowed thistle, one black seed for each hag spirit.Shifting winds, liens and unclear titles. Hardly an island, flotsamAmong the reeds and sedges, witch-hazel, the usual haggling gulls.
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Feature Date
- August 10, 2020
Series
- What Sparks Poetry
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Copyright © 2015 by Jennifer Atkinson
from “The Thinking Eye”
Parlor Press
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
Jennifer Atkinson is the author of five books of poetry. The most recent one, The Thinking Eye, was published by Free Verse Editions in 2016. Individual poems have appeared in journals including Field, Image, Witness, Poecology, Tupelo Quarterly, The Missouri Review, and Cincinnati Review. She teaches in the MFA and BFA programs at George Mason University in Virginia.
Jennifer Atkinson's The Thinking Eye, her fifth collection, looks at the syntax of our living, evolving world, paying close attention to the actual quartz and gnats, the goats and iced-over, onrushing rivers. The poems also look at the looking itself-how places and lives become "landscapes" and the ways the lenses of language, art, ecology, myth, and memory-enlarge and focus our seeing. If it's true, as Gaston Bachelard says, that whether a poet looks through a telescope or a microscope, [she] sees the same thing, then what Atkinson sees is an earth filled with violence and beauty, human malice and ten thousand separate moments of joy. Clearly in love with the earth and the (English) language-all those inter-dependent lives and forms-Atkinson pays attention to both with a Bishoppy eye, a Hopkinsy ear, and an ecopoet's conscience. Behind the book's sharp images and lush music creaks Chernobyl's rusty Ferris wheel. (Parlor Press)
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