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Iowa

Listen to Rick Barot reading this poem.


It is something to be thus saved,
a point on which landscape
comes to deepest rest.

The ore of a death held
frozen, there in the gull so far
inland, embedded in the ice

at the river's edge. Its bulk
in the thick gloss is darker
than the ice, shoe-shaped,

only the spoon-curved head
telling you what it is, one eye
open though no longer sustaining.

The feet are ribbed, like sails
tight on a mast. And a thing,
you remember, obliges by lying

down, its back to sky. How long
it has been like this, this little
of a question to the world.

How small of a happening, though
it happened because
there is witness of it. The width

Of water utterly silent,
the distance a pencil-smudge
of Chinese hills. First its fall,

then immersion, every air discovered
out of each quill,
its feathers matted with grit.

The day is a white octave, breathing
its snow, and the bird
delicate, like a bone inside the ear.


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Rick Barot's latest book is The Darker Fall. He is currently teaching at George Washington University.
Click here to visit Robert Pinsky's Favorite Poem Project site.


To submit poetry to Slate, send up to five poems and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Robert Pinsky, Slate Magazine, Boston University, 236 Bay State Road, Boston, MA, 02215.
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