Shuttle
Sky answers lake with light and lake,
sky, with a white and blue light
that fountains up through itself, wild and still.
Trembling between origin and origin
thought sheds its language skin
and the old I thins
into blades of seeing. Now the air
grows tunneled, now the sky diminishes,
stones deepen on the shore, six birds
settle in the crowns of the cedars,
herons, their eyes like burned buildings, and evening
sifts from their long feathers. The empty ferry
travels forth and back across the lake.
Its work is its movement, and the groan
of that work settles in the lake, lengthens
to deep resonance. When it arrives
to a chime, the awaited news,
with chagrin, apologizes.
And so like a moment of professional hope
the afternoon’s gold findings recede
into the hills behind us. What I want from you tonight
is hard and strange, a touch containing history, a look to lift
my name away. I want to feel, when your nails score the skin
above my heart, our venal empire
dwindling to dust. I gasp and shiver
toward a dreaming wilderness; above us
great planets slip their arcs
as the small pale stars multiply,
defying the night, doubling it, and defining,
in the stillness their fixed motion makes, to end.
Copyright © 2025 by Noah Warren. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on August 14, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.
“This poem is a lullaby. Dazzled at first by noon, it falls through smaller, more changeable worlds and tries to make meaning from its surrenders. We often say that we make ourselves through our speech. But I think we also use language to reduce ourselves, which can be pleasant in poetry or in the murmurs of marriage, even as we feel its evil form in the speech of nation-states.”
—Noah Warren