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Gapped Sonnet
by Suzanne Gardinier
Between the blinds Past the coded locks Past the slanted gold bars of the day Smelling of all-night salt rain on the docks Of grief Of birth Of bergamot Of May
In the wind that lifts the harbor litter Wet against my fingers in a dream Salvaging among the tideline's bitter gleanings Generous Exigent Lush and lean
Your voice A tune I thought I had forgotten The taste of cold July brook on my tongue A fire built on thick ice in the winter The place where lost and salvaged meet and fit The cadences a class in grief is taught in The sound when frozen rivers start to run
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Copyright � 2013 by Suzanne Gardinier. Used with permission of the author.
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About this Poem:
"I wrote this in a spring Sarah Lawrence class about the sonnet, a form I love that always makes me say what I don't know I know. The punctuation is left out in my usual attempt to make the sound of a translation, from some other language I almost understand."
Suzanne Gardinier
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Suzanne Gardinier is the author most recently of Iridium & Collected Poems 1986-2009. She teaches writing at Sarah Lawrence College and lives between Manhattan and Havana.
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