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Lisa Williams is the author of Woman Reading to the Sea (W.W. Norton, 2008), winner of the 2007 Barnard Women Poets Prize, and The Hammered Dulcimer (Utah State University, 1998). She has poems forthcoming in Best American Erotic Poems (Scribner, 2008).

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Stemming  from Stevens
by Lisa Williams

It’s not enough to cover the rock with leaves
 — as if  vernal fluidities

could be enough for the stern assault of  fact.
As if  a living ornament,

light and subject to temporal  breezes,
could be enough to overcome despair,

that chunk of  something solid in the air,
unmoving, as words repeated are.

It’s not enough to cover despair
with motion. Motion itself  is flawed,

continuous motion a narrow, thin escape
from what is rooted. Leaves do sway,

but in truth, they’re only flapping out,
ancillary, uncertain, buffeted

this way and that. They remain the fact
they are bound to, involuntary notions

victim to the weather of  a day,
gripped by what has thrust between the rocks,

flexible as everything not rock is,
reckless as imagining is reckless.


 
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