Authors: Sharon Olds
    Approaching Godthåb
So much had become so connected to him
that it seemed to belong to him, so that now,
flying, for hours, above the Atlantic
still felt like being over his realm.
And then, in the distance, a sort of landâ
rows and rows of tilted, ruched-back
pyramids and fangs of snowâ
appeared, and along its bitten hems, in the
water, hundreds of giant, white
beings, or rafts, nuzzled the shore,
moon-calves, stoats, dories, ships,
tankers green-shadowed cream, a family
of blossom-tree icebergs, his familiarsânever
mine, but once contiguous
to what I felt was almost mine,
they were like the flowers a boreal storybook
king would give his queen, hoarfrost
lilies. It struck cold awe to my heart,
now, to look at who I had been
who had thought it was impossible
that he or I could touch another.
Tu wit, tu wooâlhude sing
goddamn, cuckoo, to look back
and see myself living, vowblind, in cloud
cuckold land. The glacierscape called it
up, the silent, shining tulle,
the dreaming hats and cubes, the theorems
and corollaries, that girl who had thought
a wedding promise was binding as a law
of physics. Now, I stood outside
the kingdoms, phyla, orders, genera,
the emerald-sided frozen plenty,
as if, when he took his stones and went home, he took
snow, and ice, and glaciers, and shores,
and the sea, and the northern hemisphere,
half of the great blue-and-white aggie
itself, I sat on the air above it
and looked down on its uninhabitable beauty.
    Once in a While I Gave Up
Once in a while, I gave up, and let myself
remember how much I'd liked the way my ex's
hips were set, the head of the femur which
rode, not shallow, not deep, in the socket
of the pelvis, wrapped in the iliofemoral and
ischiofemoral ligaments,
the ball bearings suspended just so
to give him that walk. Wooden yokes, in
grade-school foreign-country-custom
movies, had moved like that, over opulent
zinc buckets of milkâthe motion
was authentic, it was from another place, it was
planetary, it was model-of-the-solar-
systemic. I idolized it without
reserve, caution, or limit, I adored it with an
unprotected joy. Months,
a year later, I still dreamed it
sometimes, the illusion of a constellation
visible only from a certain vantage,
glittering peaks of his iliac crest:
A is to B up, as B is to
C across, as C is to D
down, bright winching bitings, I even
let my right hand describe
the curve of that posterior, cool
thirty-year night's waxing gibbous
now setâin stubborn fundamentalist
conviction my hand described the mortal crescent.
    To Our Miscarried One, Age Thirty Now
Though I never saw you, only your clouds,
I was afraid of you, of how you differed
from what we had wanted you to be. And it's as if
you waited, then, where such waiting is done,
for when I would look beside meâand here
you are, in the world of forms, where my wifehood
is now, and every action with him,
as if a thousand years from now
you and I are in some antechamber
where the difference between us is of little matter,
you with perhaps not much of a head yet,
dear garden one, you among the shovels
and spades and wafts of beekeeper's shroud
and sky-blue kidskin gloves.
That he left me is not much, compared
to your leaving the earthâyour shifting places
on it, and shifting shapesâyou threw off your
working clothes of arms and legs,
and moved house, from uterus
to toilet bowl and jointed stem
and sewer out to float the rivers and
bays in painless pieces. And yet
the idea of you has come back to where
I could see you today as a small, impromptu
god of the partial. When I leave for good,
would you hold me in your blue mitt
for the departure hence. I never thought
to see you again, I never thought to seek you.
    French Bra
Then low in a fancy shop window, near my
anklebone, like a Hermes heel-wing
fitted with struts and ailerons,
fragile as a silk biplane, the
soutien-
gorge
lies, lissome, uncharged,
slack as a snakeskin husk. I stop,
I howl in seventh-grade French. The cups are
lace net, intricate as curtains in a
bee's house, in a kitchen where honey's
on the stove, in the mouth, in the pantsâand there are pants,
in eyelet appliqué, and there are gold
pinions like brushes of touch along the tops of the
poitrine
âand it's as if my body has not
heard, or hasn't believed, the news,
it wants to go in there and pick up those wisps,
those hippolyta harnesses, on its pinkie,
and bring them home to my ex and me,
mon ancien mari et moi.
It's as if
I'd been in a club, with him, with secret
handshakes, and secret looks, and touches,
and charmeuse was in the club with us, and
ribbon, they were our wing'd attendantsâ
and satin, and dotted swiss, they were our
language, our food and furniture,
our garden and transportation and philosophy
and church, stateless state and deathless
death, our music and war. Everyone
dies. Sometimes a beloved dies,
and sometimes love. Such far worse happens,
this seems it should be a toy lament,
a doll's dressmaker's dummy's song,
though people are often murdered, to celebrate
the death of love. I stand, for a moment,
looking down, at the empty costumes
of luxury, the lingerie ghosts of my sojourn.
    My Son's Father's Smile
In my sleep, our son, as a child, said,
of his father,
he smiled me
âas if into
existence, into the family built around the
young lives which had come from the charged
bouquets, the dense oasis. That smile,
those years, well what can a body say, I have
been in the absolute present of a fragrant
ignorance. And to live in those rooms,
where one of his smiles might emerge, like something
almost from another place,
another time, another set
of creatures, was to feel blessed, and to be
held in mysteriousness, and a little
in mourning. The thinness of his lips gave it
a simplicity, like a child's drawing
of a smileâa footbridge, turned over on its back, or seen
under itself, in waterâand the archer's
bow gave it a curved unerring
symmetry, a shot to the heart. I look back on that un-
clouded face yet built of cloud,
and that waning crescent moon, that look
of deep, almost sad, contentment, and know myself
lucky, that I had out the whole
night of a half-life in that archaic
hammock, in a sky whose darkness is fading, that
first dream, from which I am now waking.
    Not Quiet Enough
Dread and sorrow reaching, in time, into
every reach, there comes the hour
I wonder if my husband left me
because I was not quiet enough
in our bed. I can hardly see those nights
and afternoons, anymore, those mornings,
but now, for a moment, I can almost hear
the sound of him then, as if startled, or nearly
caught up with, nearly in the grip of something, then those
honeysuckle moans, trellis
and lattice to mine, in the body's mouth-
to-mouth full-out duet. He lived
so enclosed in himself, he seemed alive not
exactly like others, but hibernatingâ
I called for him through solid earth
until he woke, and left. Christ if my
cries woke him. Sometimes they were only
low, drenched, lock-clicks of the breath
stopped, then drifting in mortise-light
with him.â¦11,000 nights,
he seemed content with me, he seemed to like
anything, any screak or high C, but were there
brayings that graded through off-key shimmer into
prism of bruise-color, were there
mortal laments, mammal shrieks against
division, as if, in sex, we practice
the cauter of being parted. Or maybe
it was not my chirps, not the sounding
flesh of those sheets, floor, chairs, back
porches, a hayloft, woods, but this telling
of themâdid his spirit turn against the spirit which
tolled our private, wild bell
from the public rooftop, I who had no other
gift to give the world but to hold what I
thought was love's mirror up to usâ
ah now, no puff of mist on it.
After that life in the singing dream,
I woke, and feared he felt he was the human
sleeper, and I the glittering panther
holding him down, and screaming.
    Sea-Level Elegy
Then my mind goes back to the summer rental,
the stairs down into the earthâI descend them
and turn, and pass the washing machine, and go
into the bedroom, one wall the solid
pane the warbler flew into skull-first,
the opposite wall the inches-thick
seagoing mirror. Even now,
I see us, long horizontals
in the luminous pool of the wall, speckled
by the silt of the heavy plate glass, spotted
like other animals. Above us are the pine
planks, planed, and sawn aslant,
and marked with the boot-sole ridges of the builders'
Timberlands. And there, behind the pillows, are the
alcoves in which the owners kept lasts
of shoes, like wooden feet, Petrarchan
ankle slippers, out from the toe
the last-tip sproutingâhow many times, as if
risen from inside the earth, where I'd seemed to have
ocean-fathoms-flown, with him,
scarcely recognizing, my gaze would
travel over the hermetic shapes of the
dummies shoemakers had shod. And I had clothed him
with my body and been clothed with him, again,
again, unquestioned, not fully seen,
not wanting to fully see. And now,
the image of him has gone inside
the raw closet, the naked bulb's
blazing golden pear beside his
August-island shaggy head.
That's it. Once, each summer, I howl,
and draw myself back, out of there, where
desire and joy, where ignorance, where
touch and the ideal, where unwilled yet willful
blindnessâonce a year, I have mercy,
I let myself go down where I have lived, and then,
hand over hand, I pull myself back up.
    Sleekit Cowrin'
When a caught mouse corpse lay hidden, for a week,
and stuck to the floor, I started setting
the traps on a few of our wedding china
floral salad plates. Late
one night when one has sprung, I put it on
the porch, to take it to the woods in the morning, but by
morning I forget, and by noonâand by after-
noon the Blue Willow's like a charnal roof
in Persia when the bodies of the dead were put for the
scholar vultures to pick the text
of matter and the text of spirit apart.
The mouse has become a furry barrow
burrowed into by a beetle striped
in stripes of hot and stripes of cold
coalâheadfirst, it eats its way into
the stomach smoother than dirt, the mouse-bowels
saltier, beeswax and soap
stopped in the small intestinal channels.
And bugs little as seeds are seething
all over the hair, as if the rodent
were food rejoicing. And the
Nicrophorus
cuts and thrusts, it rocks and rolls
its tomentose muzzle, and its wide shoulders,
in. And I know, I know, I should put
my dead marriage out on the porch
in the sun, and let who can, come
and nourish of itâchange it, carry it
back to what it was assembled from,
back to the source of the light whereby it shone.
    Tiny Siren
And had it been a year since I had stood,
looking down, into the Whirlpool
in the laundry nook of our August rental, not
sure what I was seeingâit looked like a girl
brought up in a net with fish. It was
a miniature woman, in a bathing suit,
lying back after the spin cycleâ
the photograph of a woman, slightly
shaped over the contours of a damp towel.
I drew it outâradiant square
from some other worldâmaybe the daughter
of the owners of the house. And yet it looked like
someone we knewâI said, to my husband,
This was in with the sheets and towels.
Good heavens, he said. Where?! In
with the sheets and your running shorts. Doesn't it
look like your colleague? We gazed at the smile
and the older shapely body in its gleaming
rainbow sheathâsurprise trout
of wash-day. An hour later, he found me,
and told me she had given him the picture
the day that they went running together
when I was away, he must have slipped it in
his pocket, he was so shocked to see it
again, he did not know what to say.
In a novel, I said, this would be when
the wife should worryâis there even the slightest
reason to worry. He smiled at me,
and took my hand, and turned to me,
and said, it seemed not by rote,
but as if it were a physical law
of the earth, I love you. And we made love,
and I felt so close to himâI had not
known he knew how to lie, and his telling me
touched my heart. Just once, later
in the day, I felt a touch seasick, as if
a deck were tilting under meâ
a run he'd taken, not mentioned in our home,
a fisher of men in the washing machine.
Just for a few minutes I had felt a little nervous.