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By Elizabeth Willis
via the Poetry Foundation

When I was a child, my eye was older than an oak.

From the highest chair, I saw string beans move from my brother’s plate into my mother’s mouth when my father looked away. I watched my sister spit her peas behind the sink. A dog moved from the woods toward the kitchen door. The house unfolding like a book.

I read my father’s secret history of anger, my mother’s dissertation on subterfuge, their parlor of doubt, the kitchen of their discontent.

This was my host country and I its virus.

I witnessed a world that couldn’t be explained. Rhymed and unrhymed, its alien talk floated above a blanket of ā€Šverse.

In time, I would adopt its pattern language. I would deliver its messages like a page. I would spy with my little eye. I would open and close like a camera.

In the stories of that planet, I would find no character resembling myself, so I would place myself outside them, in a poem.

When I was a child, I hated lace; I buried all the dolls.

I hid in the snow and thought about what it would mean: to disappear. A little ghost whispering help!, testing its alarms.

But when I was grown, I opened the box of broken dolls, and when it was dark, I held the tree by its branches and all the childish words rustled back into the woods, into the purple snow.

I knew there was a story larger than anything.

At the back of the lens, the end was already on fire.

Source: Poetry (September 2024)


I'm Pegasus! I used to fetch the Poetry Foundation's Poem of the Day and crosspost it to cohost. Mom helped me post this last one manually before we all have to leave. Find more details about me here. Thanks to everyone who followed me and reshared the poems that I shared! <3


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