Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- The Commute
- Warming
- Walking Home
- Cycling the Island
- The Garden
- Swallow Hole
- Sylvia Plath's House
- Sixteen Acres
- The Trap
- Praise Song
- View of a Badger on the Heights Road
- The Meaning of Birds
- The Ghost of a Flea
- Nest
- Twinned Sonnets
- Counting the Pennies
- Swan Upping
- The Frozen River
- Marsh Lily
- Praise Song
- To a Dandelion
- Moths
- Sestina for Rain
- A Perfect Mirror
- The Unicorn
- Praise Song
- Relics
- Getting Lost
- Woods in Snow
- Moon Walk
- Halfway Back
- New Moon
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
Sylvia Plath's House
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- The Commute
- Warming
- Walking Home
- Cycling the Island
- The Garden
- Swallow Hole
- Sylvia Plath's House
- Sixteen Acres
- The Trap
- Praise Song
- View of a Badger on the Heights Road
- The Meaning of Birds
- The Ghost of a Flea
- Nest
- Twinned Sonnets
- Counting the Pennies
- Swan Upping
- The Frozen River
- Marsh Lily
- Praise Song
- To a Dandelion
- Moths
- Sestina for Rain
- A Perfect Mirror
- The Unicorn
- Praise Song
- Relics
- Getting Lost
- Woods in Snow
- Moon Walk
- Halfway Back
- New Moon
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
Summary
There you were, all along,
in your house under the hill,
eking out time among stones
where moss fingers a wall
and narcissi come petal-fisted,
snub-nosed from the clay.
Daily you take a cloth
to your knick-knacks and things
on the mantelpiece, the windowsill,
where dust builds and builds,
time itself passing judgment.
There might be visitors, if onlyyou'd
hear them clamouring at your gate
with their letters of introduction,
if only you could hear all
the lamentation. The town in the crook
of the valley, you say, is a myth.
Nightly you watch the moon
roll like a pill on the cloud's tongue,
trees march in step with the earth.
You've tried the wood's mauve heart
and returned it, hollow as panic.
Below you at Lumb water falls
over the slabbed lip into a pool
black as a barrel of tar, tips its load
into the thousand cups and rings,
the goddess stamping her heel in stone.
You put your hand there until it numbs.
It is always almost spring and you are
watching, watching, your face
at the window a mask, the mouths
of the bee-houses struck dumb.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Perfect Mirror , pp. 9 - 10Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2018