The Hawthorn

Shara Lessley

A woman thoughtshe saw Christin a tin pail of milkon the barn floorrain outside     His faceblue as marblein the predawnmilking    what were Hiskeepsakes as a childa stone maybestashed in the dirta conker    like onesboys collected forfuel and left rottingin heaps nearrailway stationsduring WWI    the casingsreminded Him ofHis mother   the shapeher hands madedays she foundher temper—lostwe say—but is thattrue?    the woman knewit's always     therein the tree   in the limbs'restraint    beneaththe shell   the solventthe hard darkseed    chemists rushedto ferment  then sentto trenches mencut  from    the farmlanda woman sawChrist  in the mistfertilizer's stale scentcome in   throughthe eaves  come Jesusin the sweethay dampening

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photo of Shara Lessley

Shara Lessley is the author of The Explosive Expert’s Wife, winner of the Sheila Margaret Motton Book Prize, Two-Headed Nightingale, and co-editor of The Poem’s Country: Place & Poetic Practice, an anthology of essays. A former Stegner Fellow in Poetry at Stanford University, her awards include a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, Washington College’s Mary Wood Fellowship, the Diane Middlebrook Poetry Fellowship from the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing, Colgate University’s Olive B. O’Connor Fellowship, and a “Discovery”/The Nation prize, among others. Shara’s work has recently appeared in American Poetry ReviewCopper NickelMagmaBennington ReviewIMAGE, and the Best American Poetry 2020 and Pushcart Prize anthologies. Consulting Editor for Acre Books, she lives in Dubai.

cover of American Poetry Review Vol. 50/No. 5

Vol. 50/No. 5

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Editor
Elizabeth Scanlon

The American Poetry Review is dedicated to reaching a worldwide audience with a diverse array of the best contemporary poetry and literary prose. APR also aims to expand the audience interested in poetry and literature, and to provide authors, especially poets, with a far-reaching forum in which to present their work.

APR has continued uninterrupted publication of The American Poetry Review since 1972, and has included the work of over 1,500 writers, among whom there are nine Nobel Prize laureates and thirty-three Pulitzer Prize winners.

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