Entering the Painter’s Space
Feel
the atmospherics. See
a
level section and believe it
to
be real. Count on contradiction,
unexpectedness,
a
link:
St.
Elmo’s rain, anticipation
soon
of seeing sun.
Sky
will not be sky alone
and
trees not only trees.
Lead
me to the clearing
at
the nexus where you dwell.
There,
a window frames a Sitka
spruce,
her drapey raiment,
a
flimsy, wishing-nest
of
mourning doves—interpreter-angels.
Overhead,
the whitish sky
we’ve
all seen holding heaven,
touching
down in lines
as
pat as math—
piercing
pink to coral-violet
sea
to seaweed green.
The
certainty of death
is
met by life, perpetual deftness.
The
things we see are anything,
not
nothing,
never
nothing. Nothing is a stand-in
language
bending
like
a lemniscate—O, there you go again,
and
over and over
So tired I could cry
and something flits, is
stuck to dust. Or is it dusk
already taking
shape of what’s contained …
I touch its face
and mind’s electric eye—a blur,
a blow-by.
I’ve stopped consuming myself
with (f)acts. The saucepan
boiling over and the hissing
hullabaloo;
I’m not an irreproachable wife.
“Did you do some email-cooking
today?”
you nod to the smoking pot.
“Our own burnt (g)host,” I testify,
aggrieved.
Bombs went off this afternoon
at C.—
Slain and maimed are whisked away,
the site restored and normalized,
per protocol, in minutes.
So tired I could cry, my eyelids
flit, the vision sticks: I’m
sitting,
wringing hands to keep my palms
from burning,
front from sloughing off. Amygdala
is over-lit, detecting some un-
verifiable smell.
“Did you land too far away
to sniff me?”
A Cappella
We heard this morning blue jays
holding a shriek-fest in the
neighbour’s maple,
long enough to signify
the truculence of nature,
its swift and sure ascent: A cappella
shrieking up to the spheres;
we settled back to breakfast. You to
your egg
and online news, I to my tea and
book.
One of a thousand breakfasts we’ve
held together
without ado. You said something
about the market—bulls and bears,
then lungs.
By which I understood you meant
a stage in fetal progress—
this is where my thoughts convene
these days.
I sip my tea, you eat your egg, the
sky beyond us
wan—except for two blue
contrails crossing the vault.
You woke before me this morning
and knew I wanted my scapulae
rubbed—
as in the knotty spots I call my
hidden-
wing insertions.
“Where did you fly in the night this
time?”
you asked, massaging the spots.
All I could recall were bits of
breath.
Twenty-Twenty
I
woke up at the end of 2020
feeling vermischt: blurry-eyed and muddled,
heavy-legged. Couldn’t get out of
bed.
I lay on my back and gazed at the squiggly
fissure in the ceiling—a crack that
had
the habit of sometimes looking like a rabbit.
Crack. Habit. Rabbit.
I read this somewhere long ago, I try to remember
where and why and how it relates to me ... a test.
Mice. White. Snow. Icy.
Which word doesn’t fit?
Horticulture. Metafiction.
Hemisphere. Subaltern.
“Sub,” I tell myself out loud, “means
cue to take
my feet down. Off the bed!”
It’s probably always a wish to turn
impairment
into clarity somehow, heaviness
to levity, and legs
to holding us up.
Weighing In
It’s
not that I sounded
wrong
to myself
when
I weighed in with my point.
It’s
more
that
the weight
fell
egg-like
down
my
front—
a
citric
tone
of yolk,
a
squelch—the sucking
sound
of treading
into
muck.
I’d
had the big idea
I
needed
to
chip in
to
the talk,
that
staying on the sideline
saying
nothing
would
make me pointless.
The
talk bobbed on, intensified,
and
waffled into Wah-Wah ~
then
the signal
petered
out—too weak
to
transfer
anything
but
noise.
At
which point
I
likely realized
I
have always loved
the
bluer, less effulgent
side
of green.
Elana Wolff lives and works in Toronto. Her poems and creative nonfiction pieces have most recently appeared in Arc Poetry Magazine, Best Canadian Poetry 2021, Canadian Literature, The Dalhousie Review, Eunoia Review, The Maynard, The Pi Review, Sepia Journal, and Vallum. Her collection, SWOON (Guernica Editions), received the 2020 Canadian Jewish Literary Award for Poetry.
She takes me into spaces I've never been before. That's what Elana Wolff's poetry does for me.
ReplyDeleteShe takes me into spaces I've never been before. That's what Elana Wolff's poetry does for me
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind comment, Mamiefly.
ReplyDeleteIt’s wonderful to hear that my poems are transportive for you. Best wishes—
Beautifully fresh images! After reading A Cappella, I will no longer look at my stress spots in my shoulders as mere "knots" but as wonderful "hidden wing insertions"! Love it!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Maria! Wing insertions forever!
ReplyDelete