POEMS


The following new & selected poems (updated from Green) can be read on this site, gratis:

I. Chain of Being
Likewise
In a Pine Grove
Chain of Being
Midsummer
Call and Response
Leaves
Souvenirs Entolomogiques
Travel Slides
In the Everglades

II. Regional Airport
The Moon Winx Sign
At the Movie Theater
Searchlights over Atom City
Planting in Tuscaloosa
Regional Airport

III. Thought Experiment
This is Something Simple
At The Pavilion, Newport
Thought Experiment for A & B
On Nothing
Infants
On Manitoulin Island
Earth’s Answer
Rain in Streetlamp Light

IV. Fragments
Movie Review
Tall Order
This is a World
Half-Rhyme
Quiet Woman
Conjuring
Story

Green
Poems by Emily Hiestand
(Graywolf Press, 1989)


National Poetry Series Award,
selected by poet Jorie Grahama

Read updated poems from Green on this site, gratis. Reviews


”The new vantage points of the physics of our time are alive in this poetry. It crackles like some source of energy we had no idea we had lived without and now, of course, would not.” — Jorie Graham

A dazzling, engaging book…Hiestand swings from earth and the quotidian to space and the larger connections of nature… a bountiful group of superb poems.” — San Jose Mercury News

"Uncommon playfulness and precision”


Likewise 

The pond is like a mackerel skin tonight,
the mackerel like a beaded evening bag.
This is like that, that is like this, oh,
let's call the whole thing off and take it straight:
nothing is like anything else.
Even the parrot and the apish ape
mirror, mimic and do like — unmatched.
to begin: algae, abalone, alewife —
each the spitting image of itself.
Likewise beetles (potato, scarab and whirligig.)
Nothing even comes close to barrel cactus,
nothing is more original than a bog,
more rare than the cougar and crane —
save all the above named.

I've never seen anything like it — dustbowls,
deer, the descent of man and estuaries,
flakes of snow (no two like) fire,
flax, gannets and gulls.
Honeybees and the Hoover Dam
are unique — there is nothing like a dam.
Ditto inbreeding, ice ages, industrialization,
joshua trees, lagoons and the law
that to liken a lichen is tautological.
Indeed, the rule of diminishing simile holds
that all of these are idiosyncracies:
the Leakeys, legumes, maize, marsupials and moose.

Virtually nothing is extraneous here —
not orchids, ooze, pampas nor peat.
This is the world of plenitude and power —
every bit of it out of this world:
the rain and rattlers, sperm, swamps and swans.
As now we inch toward an end — vectors
and a winter that figures to be like no other,
say the selfsame earth is to your liking,
and let us continue — yeast, yuccas, zoons,
all things like, beyond compare.



First published in The Atlantic Monthly, 1988
Homage Travel Stories & Essays | Poems | Contents at-a-Glance


 
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