Day 10
Dear Adriene,

Every virtue signaled. Every lawn-boy. Every lady holding a platter with outstretched arms. Every nightfall, every windbreak, every morning tumbling wet. Every petal dropped, every dropped signal, every time anyone even thought to ask. I think: sunshine as punishment, lavender as love language, how some of our insides hold dead things and we don't even know it. Shine a little light into those dark crevices of the body. A grain silo can be a metaphor for any feeling—one misstep and you are simply engulfed. Did you know suffocation rarely occurs from the weight of it? It is the grain itself that kills you, filling your every inch of throat.

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I wrote this poem a few months into the pandemic, when I was staying alone at a cottage on Lake Ontario to visit my elderly parents—outdoors and socially-distanced. Our bodies had quickly become dangerous, and I was thinking about how everything that seemed solid felt like it was disappearing out from underneath me.

Erin Dorney on "Day 10"
"Marie Howe Maps a Spiritual Journey"

"In 'What the Living Do,' Howe addresses her brother as if he were present, seeming to conjure his spirit: 'Johnny, the kitchen sink has been clogged for days.' The casualness of the writing is balanced by a sense of paralyzing grief. The poem ends with Howe finding a way past confusion and disarray and arriving at a place of light....'Whether she is confronting the joys or terrors of existence,' [Stanley] Kunitz once said of his student, 'the light that falls on the page is suffused with grace and charity. In essence she is a religious poet, that rarity among writers of her generation.'"

via THE PROVINCETOWN INDEPENDENT
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What Sparks Poetry:
Aby Kaupang on Language as Form


"Often I have thought of Bidart’s insistence on the necessary poem as clarifying my draw to poetic architecture. One night, in looking for his specific quote (for the hundredth time), I re-read his 1983 interview with Mark Halliday and was newly drawn to the part where Bidart speaks of a 'will unbroken and in stasis' that has 'learned to refuse' what the world might easily offer."
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