[with poems by Dannye Romine Powell]
When we lower her pack from the tree where it has swung all night like a bell mocking the bear, the skunk, she opens it and screams: a fairy crown atop her sweatshirt and socks, a perfect round nest and four perfect hairless mouse pups like squirming blind grubs. We peer in awe, shepherds at the manger.
Mother mouse has hidden herself, not in the pack with her babies. We lift the nest intact, hide it in a bush beside the tree, nestle leaves around. Mother will sniff out her precious ones, reclaim her treasure. But we have other lambs to tend.
We eat, stow gear, shoulder our packs, face the trail, and consider: the pack was in the tree just one night; the nest is woven from meadow grass where we slept; the mother who climbed – how many trips up and back? – was heavy with her brood.
Miles before us, a new year before us – how heavy will each day’s burdens become before night brings rest?
. . . . . . .
A new book by Dannye Romine Powell arrived in the mail this week: In the Sunroom with Raymond Carver from Press 53 in Winston-Salem. I meant to read one or two poems this morning but I have read them all. A central persona that weaves through the collection is Longing: she visits rooms in old houses, unfolds memories into the light, shares the pain that others might lock in closets. Grief shared conceives within us hope to rekindle joy. Sharing grief, sharing joy, we become more human.
. . . . . . .
The Secret
Light glazes the near-empty streets
as I drive. Beside me, my grown son asks
if a secret I thought I’d kept buried
is true. A secret
that can still catch fire.
We stop on red. A bird flies
by the windshield. My father’s words:
Easier to stand on the ground
and tell the truth than climb a tree
and tell a lie. Now, I think. Tell him.
I stare at my son’s profile,
straight nose, thick lashes.
I remember, at about his age,
how a family secret fell
into my lap, unbidden.
That secret still ransacks a past
I thought I knew, rearranging its bricks,
exposing rot and cracks,
changing the locks on trust.
. . . . . . .
In the Night, the Wind in the Leaves
swirled and rustled
out our open window as if
for the first time,
as if we never were,
the earth newborn, sweet.
And what of us – asleep
on the too-soft bed
in the old mountain house?
Gone.
Also our children.
the ones who lived, the ones who died
before they grew whole. All night
the breeze swirled and rustled
through the leaves as if it played
a secret game, swirling
and rustling all night
as if we never were.
from In the Sunroom with Raymond Carver, Dannye Romine Powell, © 2020 Press 53
. . . . . . .
Dannye Romine Powell has won fellowships in poetry from the NEA, the North Carolina Arts Council, and Yaddo. Her poems have appeared over the years in The Paris Review, Poetry, Ploughshares, The Southern Review, Harvard Review Online, Beloit, 32 Poems, and many others. She is also the author of Parting the Curtains: Interviews with Southern Writers. For many years, she was the book editor of the Charlotte Observer. In 2020 she won the Randall Jarrell Poetry Competition for her poem “Argument.”
. . . . . . .
Beautiful all around.
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Thank you for reading and expanding the circle of beauty. Bill
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What a great way to end this year and begin the new year, with the magic of mice and Dannye’s wonderful and haunting poems. Thanks, Cuz. Happy New Year to you and Linda and family.
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I love that mouse family! Thank you for sharing Dannye’s mystical poems… so much can happen in one night… today’s truth: 2020 is “gone” and, however burdensome, we claim the victory!
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Troubling that we often trap ourselves into thinking of “new” as scary, suspect, threatening, but restorative that we also consider “new” as fresh, hopeful, rich. Here’s to the best of all things new . . . Bill
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Bill — I am just seeing this most kind and generous review of “In the Sunroom,” seeing it thanks to Joseph B., who sees all things and knows all things. Thank you, thank you. I am lifted by your comments as we head into new and better territory this year, I hope. Happy New Year to you, Bill, and gracious thanks. Dannye
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Thanks, Dannye. I am deeply touched by your book and feel a most personal connection. — Bill
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Bill — Thank you for that. So much.
Now I want to tell you about another poet. Her name is Patricia Hooper and her fifth or sixth collection was published last spring by the University of Tamp a Press. She is a Michigan native — a four-time Hopwood winner at the U of Michigan — but has lived in Gastonia for the past 10 or so years. She is an outstanding poet. How can she get her latest book to you? Her email is jeph@carolina.rr.com.
Thanks so much, Bill. You won’t be disappointed.
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Thanks, Dannye. I have ordered Wild Persistence and Separate Flights directly from the Press. I appreciate the suggestions!
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