Summer 2020 Poetry Selections: Selected Poems by Elizabeth Jacobson
By Elizabeth Jacobson
Curator of Insects
I started asking questions
about how human bodies held together.
Already I was a certain age,
and not seeing any usual
patterns.
My mind had become fuzzier,
mirroring the now fuzzier
vision of my eyes.
I read about hymenoptera vision,
how paper wasps and honeybees
can remember the characteristics of a human face.
And since a dragonfly had
remembered me,
I knew that this is true for them as well.
Some insects live only a few
hours
or a few weeks,
30 days for a fruit fly,
2 months for a horse fly.
I saw the age of the body
might never again match the stretch of its will,
and like Keats, who remarked on
the fading animation of his hand
at the end of his life,
there grew a sadness for this
former vivacity,
yet unlike Keats, I had joy in its release.
Some of the things I do seem to
move backwards.
Others feel as if they have a spherical momentum.
As I grow older, it all appears
to taper,
yet there is also a broadening,
and although this is
illogical,
this is what happens to people.
The dropping away leaves
space,
which quickly floods with small things
like the blue-eyed dragonfly in
flight,
facing me in the early morning,
or saving an ant from
drowning
in a puddle of warm rainwater.
I cultivate flowers and trees
for a small variety of bees,
offer them aspen and willow for when they are ailing.
They scrape the resin off the
leaves
and secure it to their back legs.
A box elder bug has been
resting on the base of the
desk lamp for days,
his tender black limbs secured around the cord.
He is close to death, and
waiting.
All
my life, I tell him, I have been told I should not
see the things I see,
the
way I see them.
It is too late for all that now.
He turns his head and thorax toward my voice,
his opaque bead eyes red with inquiry.
Each Day Travelling
Hello Buson!
I found another dead snake on
the road today
and thought of you, the way you said Use the commonplace
to
escape the commonplace. Your square
face
framed many canvases— the ashen leaves
of cold days,
one purple thistle poking through.
You walked a long way
with pebbles in your shoes,
sat above a mountain pond
considering your reflection
until nothing remained.
Here, the foothills are full of
coyotes,
and in my room I am surrounded
with the yelps of their
longing.
The senses flood; the sunken islands of brackish grass
appear to float in the
pond—
the whole world is in me,
an unrelenting grief that is
each day travelling
so quickly into the next. How
closely
you looked at things: Struck
by a raindrop, snail closes up.
And then, dear Buson, and then?
You would have kissed me, I
think,
on all sides of my face.
Electrical Storm
When the lights went out
So many things were happening
But all I wanted to do was
write a poem
About how good it felt
To fill buckets with cold
water
From the gravity fed pump in the orchard
To walk across the tall summer
grass
Feeling the hollow crush of deathlessness
Cushion the soles of my feet
And store the buckets under the porch
For drinking and safe
keeping.
When the lights went out
The crickets strummed louder
for mates
The stars shone brighter,
A voice called out of the
blackness
That was exactly me
Life is just a thing that feels like something.
When the lights went out
The canyon wren offered a feather to the night
And the bear shat in peace
Under the apple tree by the back door.
It felt so good to be in the
dark
With nothing turning on
And nothing turning off,
To hear a voice that was exactly mine
And everything else’s
At the same time
If you don’t do another thing,
You’ve done enough.
—
Elizabeth Jacobson, poet laureate of Santa Fe, New Mexico, is the author, most recently, of Not into the Blossoms and Not into the Air (free Verse Editions/Parlor Press, 2019) which won the New Measure Poetry Prize selected by Marianne Boruch, and the 2019 New Mexico–Arizona Book Award for both New Mexico Poetry and Best New Mexico Book. She is the reviews editor for the online literary journal Terrain.org and teaches poetry workshops regularly in the Santa Fe community.