My good friend Isabel Zuber is both poet and novelist. We met 30 years ago at a writers conference led by A.R. Ammons in Critz, Va. A native of Boone, NC, she has lived her adult life in Winston-Salem. Her first novel Salt was published by Picador, and her chapbooks of poems have been published by the NC Writers Network (Annual chapbook award) and Persephone Press. More of her work may be found in the archives of ncarts.org, as well as in several anthologies, the most recent being Southern Appalachian Poets (http://www.mcfarlandpub.com/). The following poem is from her as yet unpublished full-length collection Red Lily.
Nightward
A last enormous freedom
is to run into the dark,
barely enough day left
to see vague hydrangeas
massed along the drive
and junipers up like spears
and junipers up like spears
against the sky. Bound then
in the dusk with all that
in the dusk with all that
can be there light says is not.
Rush the yard on grass-lashed,
bug-bit legs, turn round
and round till stars collide
with spires, breaking the
huge dinning noise
of all those tiny voices.
Such venture is less, or more,
Such venture is less, or more,
than brave, for dew’s sweet
or bitter, and there’s always
the lighted doorway and
the sense that if one runs
far and hard enough
there are arms in the darkness also.
1 comment:
Thanks for introducing me to another wonderful poet. That last line took my breath away.
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