Patty Seyburn "Sense of Things"

Sense of Things

Patty Seyburn

Loose air ellipses from the open fist.
Wind chimes tuned to Chicago blues'
five notes refuse

to resolve a chord due to brackish winds,
breeze's beck, the ocean sullen
with white spume.

Room rife with ambivalence the moment
can't shake. Will nothing happen? Things
are happening right

here. Here, take this tangerine, cleave it
into twelve tribes; if you had picked
a mango it would be

all yours and there would be no discord,
no dross. No way to make sense of things
that have so little.

Distress waits in the wings, paints a scrim,
bastes a hem, wants the ingenue to break
her neck. The air could

be eaten with a pudding spoon. Nothing
seems right. ("On." "Accurate." "Best.")
Be thankful--you have that.

Nature hates a vacuum, just ask and
you'll conceive. How can you even think
of raising an idea

in this neighborhood, with all these
sinister trees and cul-de-sacs? The world
is a poor fit. All the tailors

on Carnaby Street, Rue St. Faubourg
and Seventh Avenue can't do anything.
You'll have to grow into it.

 

Tables of Content

Seventeen (Fall 2003) Sixteen (Spring 2003)

Fifteen (Fall 2002)
Fourteen (Spring 2002)

Thirteen (Fall 2001) Twelve (Spring 2001)

Eleven (Fall 2000) Ten (Spring 2000)

Nine (Fall 1999) Eight (Spring 1999)

Seven, (Fall 1998) Six, (Spring 1998)

Five (Fall 1997) Four (Winter/Spring 1997) 

Three (Summer/Fall 1996) Two (Winter 1996) 

One (Spring 1995)