Things I Didn’t Know Before I Started Sketching

Emily Gordon

You can be angry at a landscape,

the light you thought was there

furtive as a boyfriend, shifting

willfully, permissionless, no sign.

White pencil blurs flaws, dilutes

and also illuminates, how vital

it turns out to be. Fuck negative space!

There is no surface uncovered

by pine needles, illogical shadows,

Amish lace in the trees at the shoreline,

impossible branches without origin.

Did you know lake waves are crosshatching,

did you know the crest of the mountain

is spiky as an unshaven shin?

How do you draw the sun that fell

through the net of the branches,

spent snakeskin fragile on a brown

forest floor. How do you show

the stripes on the hammock spotlit

like a tiny bicyclist in a grey Sempé

with a jeweled bouquet in his basket.

 

Emily Gordon grew up in Wisconsin and California and is a longtime journalist and editor. Her poems have also appeared in The Baffler, The Women’s Review of Books, Painted Bride Quarterly, Indie Soleil, HIV Here and Now, Transition, and the Toronto Globe & Mail. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut, and is a sound improviser for the Dirty Little Secrets show in New York City.

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