Tendril
& just the vermillion
flicker of cannas near the pane.
Our bodies too, plateaued;
my hole, newly bloomless.
Outdoors, further out, a wren
winnows, the mesquite
on whose yielding limbs the all-
but-tender fowl rests
flexes, in cold as in darkness . . .
Time, like desire, expands too—
no? My lover, nodding gently,
shakes the leaves, &
A little softer. A little softer now—
A little softer, for what’s been torn.
Copyright © 2022 by Jada Renée Allen. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on November 17, 2022, by the Academy of American Poets.
“Around the time of writing this sonnet, I was obsessed with concepts of lyric time and movement. For instance, how in one line the poem’s subjects may be indoors and, in the next seven or eight, seemingly, the subjects are in nature. So much of love is this way: a presence, an absence, the distance between the two or lack thereof—it’s magic and not. I found the sonnet, with its volta, to be the most appropriate form for this bewildering, twisting wonder of mine.”
—Jada Renée Allen