Contributors

Lament on the Eve of her Daughter's Birthday


My head doesn’t ache

no one pulls out my fingernails

what I eat sits easy


On this long

blue night each year

leven forget that

hard hard laboring


a magician

hacking a woman in two


If I lie still

your thirty-six years

blow my mind.


II try to reach you

I'm too short


But now at last

night darkens

into day


and you may wish for

what you want

What is it


Write me

Tell me something

Sing

September Solitaire


There are always added difficulties: unwashed glasses,

the box with some sweaters, the floral arrangement

in the kitchen, the kitchen floor. It was a grid

of pale blue and gray linoleum; it no longer exists.

All of us move in time for winter.

Things are most dangerous when habits are kicked;

birds, and the way you imagine.


We tell stories.

This to restrain the sense that we would give in

too easily when the time came. The time had come.

The first red and the first green are not the same;

between death and birth are radical colors,

of which the trees are stain. I told stories for hours,

each made from imminent, rendered places; talk itself

a terrain. I recall games: ducking and kisses and tails.

Someone is always blinded. Someone was removed in a chair.

Ann Lauterbach is a native New Yorker. She has just compiled her first collection of poems, titled Chalk. Estelle Leontief was poetry editor of Colloquy magazine, has published two books of poetry—Razerol and Whatever Happens—with Claire van Vliet of Janus Press, Vermont. She is now a reader of poetry and fiction for the Partisan Review.

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