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The History of Servia
Also a record whether derived from east or from west, they'll conjugate evening, too, when it comes, west orange-purple east my daughter and I lean, eat stirfry in table-light, birdsound moving space by lace slings— daughter, adopted from Suzhou, with its perfected canals though Venice equally could be called the Suzhou of the West- history trying to nudge space, move sound, make promises with the integrity of death Suzhou and Venice lick many mirrors, both
The Description of the World
Announcement: Sound turns over in the robin's throat, by Marco Polo, a wise and learned citizen of Venice, who states distinctly what things he Truth: the bluejay ribbons to a denser And truth: my daughter and I sit where stars and streetlights tonight on tree branches polished by scallops of sky leaf-edge of evening-- before they roll to an even night,
The titles and italicized lines of the above poem is taken, respectively, from Marco Polo's The Description of the World, and Leopold Ranke's The History of Servia, and the Servian Revolution with a Sketch of the Insurrection in Bosnia. |
Daneen Wardrop's poems have appeared in Seneca Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, Triquarterly Magazine,Epoch, Hayden's Ferry, and other magazines. Professor of English at Western Michigan University, she is the author of two books of literary criticism, including Emily Dickinson's Gothic (University of Iowa Press).
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Copyright © 2004 by Daneen Wardrop, all rights reserved. This text may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of U.S. Copyright law, and it may be archived and redistributed in electronic form, provided that the editors are notified and no fee is charged for access. Archiving, redistribution, or republication of this text on other terms, in any medium, requires the notification of the journal and consent of the author. |