Ebook: Trapeze: poems
Author: Digges Deborah
- Tags: Aging, LITERARY CRITICISM--Poetry, POETRY--General, Middle-aged women, Poetry, Digges Deborah, Middle-aged women -- Poetry, Aging -- Poetry, POETRY -- General, LITERARY CRITICISM -- Poetry
- Year: 2004
- Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
- City: New York
- Language: English
- epub
Winter barn -- Telling the bees -- Greeter of souls -- Lilacs -- Trapeze -- Becoming a poet -- Gown of moleskins -- Seersucker suit -- The Rainbow Bridge in the painting of the Sung dynasty -- Boat -- Raising the Woolly Mammoth -- Midsummer -- Shopping with the Muses -- My life's calling -- Guillotine windows -- Solomon's spoons -- Ice Fishermen -- So light you were I would have carried you -- My literary marriage -- Two of the lost five foolish virgins -- Trillium -- The gardens offered in place of my mother's dying -- Pomegranate -- Damascus -- Fence of sticks.;These lush, rewarding reflections on a woman's passage into midlife are grounded in our intimacy with nature and mortality. Deborah Digges, now in her fifties, looks back in such poems as "Boat" to see younger mothers and their children, and ponders her own "brilliant, trivial unmooring." As she wanders from the garden to the barn and into the woods, she finds her moods mirrored in the calendar of the seasons, making lush music of the materials at hand and accepting the seismic changes in her life with an appreciation for the incidental scraps of beauty she chances upon. Throughout these luminous poems'which touch movingly on the illness and loss of her husband'Digges marvels at the brio with which we fling ourselves daringly into the night: See how the first dark takes the city in its arms and carries it into what yesterday we called the future. O, the dying are such acrobats. Here you must take a boat from one day to the next, or clutch the girders of the bridge, hand over hand. But they are sailing like a pendulum between eternity and evening, diving, recovering, balancing the air. From the Hardcover edition.
Download the book Trapeze: poems for free or read online
Continue reading on any device:
Last viewed books
Related books
{related-news}
Comments (0)