Reuters photo
By
Daisy Bassen
House of the Birds, Museu Nacional
The word for a word that is not yet a word,
Verging on emergence from glottal stops,
The canny re-assortment of lingual conjugation,
Portmanteaux and backformations, lucent
As lucubration with its embedded candlelight,
The hand rubbing the back of the neck
Where the spine reaches up to skull, studded
With thorns we kept, that keep us safe;
The museum is meant to preserve the critical,
But what’s left is ash, like Alexandria, a haze
Over the city of carbon and the fine, infinite pains
That went into making. The meteorite survived,
Naturally. It’s an alien and fire is no more trouble
Than the distance between planets. We had no hand
In its creation, none in its destruction. The mummies
Went up first, lit like torches. They were made to burn.
Daisy Bassen
I am a practicing psychiatrist and poet. I graduated from Princeton University with a degree in English and completed my medical training at the University of Rochester and Brown. I have been published in Black Buzzard Review, Oberon, The Sow’s Ear, AMWA Literary Review, The Opiate, SUSAN|The Journal, Arcturus and Adelaide Literary Review. I have pending publications at The Delmarva Review, The Minetta Review, Wilderness House Literary Review, Pirene’s Fountain, After the Pause, THAT Literary Review, LEVELER, Mothers Always Write, Mobius, The Paragon Press, MORIA, IthacaLit and The Cape Rock. I was a semi-finalist in the 2016 Vassar Miller Prize in Poetry. I live in Rhode Island with my husband and children.
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