This section contains 3,737 words (approx. 13 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: "Speaking in Tongues: The Poetry of Erin Mouré," in Essays on Canadian Writing, No. 43, Spring, 1991, pp. 133-43.
Glickman is a Canadian poet, educator, and critic whose works include Henry Moore's Sheep, and Other Poems (1990). In the following essay, she provides an overview of Moure's work.
To get back to that purity. My friend, hand, voice a stutter at
the edge of. What is. Real trees with real birds in the branches,
wet tamarack, the birds' feathers glossed up & beaks singing.
The throats birds have, throats of thrushes, oh soft spotted brown
chest repeating bird-ness
Oh name of the bird
Thrush
Do I have you beside me, me who is so small, the seeds I have
gnawed ache inside of me forever, do I have you beside me, bird.
Take the cup of wine away from me, so I won't fill it again. Take
away the telephone number...
This section contains 3,737 words (approx. 13 pages at 300 words per page) |