Here's a Lisa Fishman poem that caught my eye going through her book Dear, Read at the Bookery this evening:
To AristotleA pomo pastoralist without a doubt, and an heir of Dickinson, bursting Circumference. Here's the poem immediately following:
I did go lame in the Spring
My sleeping sister went deaf
Our father who could talk to ghosts lost his hands
& the bride wore yellow and danced in circles
The brown-eyed Susans on the hillside
marked the occasion
haphazardly growing wild in the rupture of the unities
Fires
It was sassafras we gathered late,
like a deadline, in the summer
just the leaves, the lemon-colored stems of which we sucked
on what felt like "the far edge of the woods"
Meanwhile the kindling lay ungathered, and trillium grew
visible at the bases of trees
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