Reach

By IAIN TWIDDY

 

As if he was pelting for a winter, 
his hair returning, the closer he gets, 
to that flossy, watchful, infant softness,
like the idea of an angel’s wing;

and how would it feel, as cotton as snow, 
clean, unimprinted, like the first breath of light 
on an overnight fall, should I reach out,
cup his skull as he once must have mine,

as he did when I watched him rinsing 
the baby shampoo from my baby sister
in the pour of Sunday morning light, the beaker
dipped, warmly filled, lifted and tilted so 

it never can wash away, the bubble of thought
how that could not come across—me taller
than him—as the ultimate condescension, 
when it held the opposite intention. 

And is this, by extension, what happens to men;
does this account for the lengths they have gone,
raising up bridges to span headlong chasms,
hacking up beyond oxygen to lay 

their hacked hands on top of ash-black mountains;
is this something of what they run from, 
zooming like boys with toy rockets to the moon 
to bounce up and down as on a trampoline?

And is that why it feels more real to me 
on a snow-cloud night, my father below, 
to crack the spine of Book VI, and read once more
of Aeneas crossing the threshold of death

to the underworld meadow, where, early,
amidst bog cotton and dandelion seed,
three times he reaches out to embrace him,
three times feels the spirit so like mist melt away, 

it makes more sense to me to approach it
trying to forget that with all the space 
of an epic to address the issue 
of whether Anchises is reaching too, 

or shrinking like snow, the poet doesn’t say.

 

 

Iain Twiddy studied literature at university and lived for several years in northern Japan. His poetry has appeared in Harvard Review, Salamander, Illuminations, The Stinging Fly, The London Magazine, and elsewhere. He has written two critical studies, Pastoral Elegy in Contemporary British and Irish Poetry and Cancer Poetry.

[Purchase Issue 20 here.]

 

From the beginning, The Common has brought you transportive writing and exciting new voices. We are committed to supporting writers and maintaining free, unrestricted access to our website, but we can’t do it without you. Become an integral part of our global community of readers and writers by donating today. No amount is too small. Thank you!

Reach

Related Posts

New York City skyline

Lawrence Joseph: New Poems

LAWRENCE JOSEPH
what we do is // precise and limited, according to / the Minister of Defense, // the President / is drawing a line, // the President is drawing / a red line, we don’t want to see  / a major ground assault, the President says, / it’s time for this to end, / for the day after to begin, he says, // overseer of armaments procured

rebecca on a dock at sunset

Late Orison

REBECCA FOUST
You & I will grow old, Love, / we have grown old. But this last chance // in our late decades could be like the Pleiades, winter stars seen by / Sappho, Hesiod & Galileo & now by you & me. // Let us be boring like a hollow drill coring deep into the earth to find / its most secret mineral treasures.

Waiting for the Call I Am

WYATT TOWNLEY
Not the girl / after the party / waiting for boy wonder // Not the couple / after the test / awaiting word // Not the actor / after the callback / for the job that changes everything // Not the mother / on the floor / whose son has gone missing // I am the beloved / and you are the beloved