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![]() More on poetry from The Atlantic Monthly. Also by Henri Cole: Childlessness (1997) Horses (1996) |
The Atlantic Monthly | December 2001
Black Camellia
by Henri Cole ..... after Petrarch Little room, with four and a half tatami mats and sliding paper doors, that used to be a white, translucent place to live in refined poverty, what are you now but scalding water in a bath? Little mattress, that used to fold around me at sunrise as unfinished dreams were fading, what are you now but a blood-red palanquin of plucked feathers and silk airing in the sun? Weeding the garden, paring a turnip, drinking tea for want of wine, I flee from my secret love and from my mind's worm—This is a poem. Is this a table? No, this is a poem. Am I a girl?— seeking out the meat-hook crowd I once loathed, so afraid am I of finding myself alone. Copyright © 2001 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; December 2001; Black Camellia; Volume 288, No. 5; 92. |
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