At first it hovers in the folds, this
swirling. Few things stick,
not conversation, train schedules, job details, names.
Everything falls into
membranous time.
Only the losses
get caught in the net, hard little seeds.
Last month four of my loved ones died.
No secret, just normal catastrophe.
Few want to hear
so I stand at corners and paint.
People don’t mind painters
setting up easels, almost
part of the landscape, ourselves.
Our shadows are long purple sweeps across parks.
Picnickers wave as they lunch.
A man in a red cap brings over his son,
admires my watercolor.
I’m not spying, really,
just sketching with brushstrokes and line,
just trying to piece the atmosphere together,
to map this brief landscape.
by Cathleen Cohen
About the Artwork
The accompanying artwork is by contributor Stefan Hengst.
Appears In
Cagibi Issue 2
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