Orchid Tierney

dear dr. Williams :: arial foundation park :: eclipse 2024

you push the plastic shades up your nose :: you plan to have fun and watch the sun :: the park is strangely buoyant :: the children float above the mounds :: their parents vibrate light :: you and your friend write poems while you wait :: this moment is a sign :: of what you are unsure :: it doesn’t matter :: it’s a sign and you are ribboned glass :: you both form a v in the grass :: the catholic in you always reads the signs :: and when the moon finally slides into place you marvel at its glass :: it feels wrong to stare as if death is the plan :: as if you are watching the end and everyone dies before they die again :: one minute is not nearly enough to read the signs :: the doctor in you is always reading the signs :: but you cannot escape your glass :: even the grass is screaming while the glass birds have fallen silent :: they too are reading the signs :: are you having fun yet? the glass in you is always reading the signs :: the cullets are pushing light like death except you remember the solid glass :: it’s a prism :: and when your friend breaks the v you keep surveillance on the moon as if it moves through fractured glass :: death is the plan you keep watching :: even when the sun appears you keep falling for the signs

dear dr. Williams: the filling station psychotherapist

you struggle for several minutes with the nozzle because the trigger is lodged in its groove :: the attendant watches sceptically but does not move from his booth :: it is a spiritual sin to mock his inspiration :: he’s empathetic when he hollers for you to drive to another fucking pump :: of course you do a u-ie :: why do you always struggle with reversing? of course the keypad isn’t working :: of course the display screen flickers :: crossed words :: of course you head inside :: cheque in hand and only 23.19 left in insight :: of course the attendant points to your leg :: his eyes locked on the tattoo :: what’s that? he asks :: his body planking upon the counter :: a lily, you reply :: ah yes, he says :: that must be your name :: yes, you nod :: you lay your hand upon the counter :: yes :: the form of your speech holds the dynamic of meaning :: what is it he says next that invents inspiration? is it a recognition? you will have to write about it later :: this moment :: the awe :: the memory is always far richer than its image :: stay awhile lily, he says :: there is so much he would like to talk about

dear dr. Williams :: to Marcia

you unfairly label the poet a poet when she gently corrects your letters :: the stroke has warped your signature :: she has become your hand :: isn’t she your final editor, after all? the editing is the writing :: the extension of your poem :: editing is a woman, you reason :: and in the end you take your weary way as best you can :: you hope for the best :: never mind the success of her complaints :: that you abandoned the poet while she was in hospital after a major operation :: if you are bothered, you refuse to show it :: you invent a poem far richer than any given thing :: what is that thing? a hallucination :: a delusion :: a feeling experienced when you drive home late at night after class and the streetlights are out :: the car shudders and you think oh my god you hit something :: is it a dog a cat a racoon a skunk? whatever it is you continue down the road until the guilt finally overwhelms you :: it is logical that you swing the vehicle around and return to the site of your murder :: you are relieved to find that it is not a dog, a cat, a racoon or a skunk but a pothole :: the guilt of your words will cause more wounds than you can imagine :: your faults are too liverish :: too grey :: you will never shake the feeling :: the world is in a perilous state, you think :: you will never invert that phrase unless it lies in your power :: don’t do it :: no matter how the line sounds :: you always imagine strange scenarios like this pothole :: the dissolution of your faith always compels a return to the site of the disaster :: of course, it is just a pothole :: just as you are a stupid animal :: excellence in the imagination is the prerogative of your mind :: it is easy to go mad in Rutherford as it is in Mount Vernon :: that’s the poem you think :: the rest of it is yours

dear dr. Williams: you look well

you can tell by the error that you are frustrated :: that this aging body leaves its betrayals in the aas and the esses and strange cases :: recall how that one colleague goes to the gym because—as they tell you—they are committed to decaying slowly :: for your part you have decided to accelerate towards a crisis :: the world is in a perilous state :: who said you have brain damage :: it’s COVID, you think :: everyone is sick :: everyone says you LOOK wonderful and the mirror seems to verify it but your feet and the insides of your head have given you the lie :: you are fortunate :: your typewriter or phone or computer or pen approximates your body :: some kin of extension :: of space time and mind :: it gives you a sense of control when everything is falling apart :: but you refuse to lose faith :: you can still use the left hand to type an occasional poem :: you can still bend your body toward a luxuriant gender :: how strange you think that you should have gone to bed together :: but everything is also going well :: the doctor already said it is a miracle that any of us are alive

dear dr. Williams: grief pastoral

you know the deer are determined :: they grief the bird feeder intimately :: their appetite astonishes even you :: they always take more no matter how much seed you lay out :: good grief :: even the squirrels abide at the periphery of the skeleton tree holding onto dear life :: the deer dare the grief of your watching :: the bulldozers in the clearing :: forget the robins :: the cuckoo :: the hawk :: the crow :: they have found another place to sing :: your grief taps the window :: but deer insist on feeding :: with you here enduring by the window :: listening for an angry robin :: chasing the uncut seed to feed its grief

dear dr. Williams : from the critic :: wheel-bearings [sinantherina socialis]

you hold your tongue but listen :: sex is expressed in sound and gossip is infrastructure in this colony :: the waterbees fight for the stone of this flower and you are prone to random cleaving :: you are cosmopolitan :: you have a need to be the sole source :: you have a need for cruel distortion of this ooze the poets call water :: you desire to be the definition :: but you are too ganglion to define tradition :: the gloopy slime of the pond will ensnare any wheel who dares to follow your motor :: should you spin to a new water column the currents will shear your delicate toes :: but who knows :: maybe the larvae will follow

Note

Since 2023, an archival impulse has drawn me to the University of Buffalo Special Collections and the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, where I have explored the correspondences between various modernist poets, including Williams, for a separate project. I found myself especially mesmerised by the dramas contained in Williams’ private letters. He was highly attuned to his community, its people, and the soap-operatic lives of poets. His letters also reflected issues that continue to circulate today: Williams expressed anxieties about his personal identity, war, income disparities, and the state of healthcare, among many others. I felt moved to write on the parallels between his time and ours in a new manuscript-in-progress titled the gravity of letters in measures.

These epistles employ techniques such as the ambiguous “you,” which slips between Williams and a persona, textual collage, and scientific metaphors to collapse a sense of time and place. I am less interested in the adage “history repeats,” which, I think, forecloses any intellectual inquiry as to why? Rather, I want to focus on the stakes in living well against social and political violence. Cultivating a shared space, where thrivance and poetry can intertwine, is, perhaps the heartful growl at the centre of these poems.

Orchid Tierney is a poet, scholar, and knowledge worker. She is the author of this abattoir is a college (Calamari Archive, 2025) and a year of misreading the wildcats (The Operating System, 2019) as well as several chapbooks including looking at the Tiny: Mad lichen on the surfaces of reading (Essay Press, 2023). She teaches at Kenyon College, is a senior editor at the Kenyon Review and invites you to visit her website at www.orchidtierney.com.
This entry was posted in Poetry and tagged , by Posit Editor. Bookmark the permalink.

About Posit Editor

Susan Lewis (susanlewis.net) is the Editor-in-chief and founder of Posit (positjournal.com) and the author of ten books and chapbooks, including Zoom (winner of the Washington Prize), Heisenberg's Salon, This Visit, and State of the Union. Her poetry has appeared in anthologies such as Walkers in the City (Rain Taxi), They Said (Black Lawrence Press), and Resist Much, Obey Little (Dispatches/Spuyten Duyvil), as well as in journals such as Agni, Boston Review, The Brooklyn Rail, Conjunctions online, Diode, Interim, New American Writing, and VOLT.