A Moment Without Objects
Gregory Djanikian | Poetry
Suddenly I felt I had to prove something
and I went from cupboard to bed stand,
to coffee mug and desk to find what I thought
had been missing from my life
as though I could find it
where I had spent most of my hours.
I sharpened a pencil, I plucked
a guitar string, though nothing seemed to be
different from what had always been.
I said mountain and desert
as if the two contrarieties
would offer me a doorway
to a sideways landscape
though everything stood as it was
while I counted my breaths
without keeping track of the number.
Then there was a shrill sound
at the window, a blue jay’s screech,
a shadow of wing tipping the balance.
Then the noise of the house readjusting its planks
and sunlight falling on the kitchen floor
and my fingers running slowly
along the smooth apparition of morning
without knowing why.
Gregory Djanikian has published six collections of poetry with Carnegie Mellon University Press, the latest of which is Dear Gravity (2014). His poems have appeared in many journals including American Poetry Review, The American Scholar, Boulevard, The Georgia Review, Iowa Review, The New Criterion, New Ohio Review, Pleiades, Poetry, Poetry Northwest, The Southern Review, and TriQuarterly, and he has been featured on NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. He teaches poetry workshops at the University of Pennsylvania.
Featured Image by Daniel Tseng