in the air with iskandar haggarty

This week’s poem “Flutter” by Iskandar Haggarty comes from his online chapbook There Are No Women In Our House (Praxis Magazine) and is a great example of how a lyric sequence can range in dynamic both conceptually and structurally. In terms of concept, Haggarty keeps the imagery “in the air,” so to speak, across the three sections of the sequence, charging the poem with the flutter of “sparrows” and “fireflies” as well as the expansiveness of a sky that includes moon, planets, and constellations.


This in the air work is furthered in terms of structure by the use of three line stanzas, or tercets, throughout. The sequence goes from four tercets in the first section, to three in the second, and two in the last. This consistency varies within each section by having a single line conclude each one.


[image error]This structural work creates a visual shape that has the eye “flutter” along with the concept, both moving the reader through the poem’s lyric narrative. The result is a poem that surprises by what it can evoke through its turns and images. From awe to “morning sadness” to finally wonder, this lyric sequence creates its intimacy in an indirect yet vivid manner.


Flutter – Iskandar Haggarty


I.


Your mother had

sparrows

tangled in her hair


and fireflies

trapped inside

her vocal cords.


Every morning, she’d

awaken before the moon

had slumber in its eye


and lightly brush your

snoring father’s

head full of Saturn


with her lips.


II.


Your mother was made

of ashes and was married

to the stars.


Each night, she’d rain down

from Ursa Major,

sprinkling the edges


of thunderbolts

and canopies,

fertilizing the soil


with morning sadness.


III.


Your mother was

the daughter of

Jupiter.


Really? I asked,

my eyes full of

crescents.


The butterflies in Grandpa’s eyelids smiled.


*


Happy fluttering!


José





Goodreads Book Giveaway Small Fires by Jose Angel Araguz

Small Fires
by Jose Angel Araguz

Giveaway ends August 10, 2017.


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Published on July 14, 2017 10:14
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