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Wake



Open your bedroom window in the heart of winter.
Wrap the wool blanket around you, the one
your brother once used to pin you beneath

for hours, held down by the chesterfield
and an ottoman. You resisted until
you were underwater, your eyes and lungs

filled with light, and you went to sleep
on the carpet. When you stopped struggling
you were left alone. Alone now, let the night

air in. The snap of it in your lungs like croup,
your mother rocking you in the bathroom, the tub
filled with steaming water, how she sang your name

again and again as if to call you back. Listen now
to the buzzing of electric wires outside
your window, the constant murmur, the way

you imagine the world must work—the secrets
people keep and then tell. It must be like waking
to a room full of yellow roses, knowing those truths.

Bouquet after bouquet from friends—they did not
forget you after all. Like waking to her humming
in a steaming room, life coming back to your lungs.


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Comments

1 |
Great poem.
I really liked the poem, it spoke to me coming from a family with a brother. It made me think about all the times we fought. I liked it.
— posted 01/09/2013 at 17:48 by John Michael Smith
2 |
Stunning!
Startlingly beautiful and so Proustian!
— posted 01/09/2013 at 18:19 by arpita das
3 |
So urgent
and so lovely. My favorite line, "you imagine the world must work - the secrets"
A complete description of a very particular consciousness.
— posted 01/09/2013 at 19:11 by tembi
4 |
Modern
Like an ancient mariner.
— posted 01/29/2013 at 02:44 by G Morris
5 |
layered
I love the way Molly opened her winter window window for us, revealing the layers of life and its living: childhood, loyalty; illness, breavement, et al, so gently and succinctly. Bravo.
— posted 03/07/2013 at 19:56 by kerry rawlinson
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About the Author

Molly Minturn’s poetry has appeared in Indiana Review, and she has worked as an editor at Iowa Review and Virginia Quarterly Review. She is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop.

Anna Maria Hong,
A Parable

Andrew Zawacki,
Station


   



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