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The Academy of American Poets

May 2, 2008

Today's poem is from Fragment of the Head of a Queen, just published by Sarabande Books. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.

Read more about this book.


Also on Poets.org

Poems and Prose by Cate Marvin
Scenes From the Battle of Us
Essay: First-Person Usage in Poetry

Contemporary Love Poems
Rent
by Jane Cooper
The Fist
by Derek Walcott


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A Windmill Makes a Statement
by Cate Marvin

You think I like to stand all day, all night,
all any kind of light, to be subject only
to wind? You are right. If seasons undo
me, you are my season. And you are the light
making off with its reflection as my stainless
steel fins spin.

                       On lawns, on lawns we stand,
we windmills make a statement. We turn air,
churn air, turning always on waiting for your
season. There is no lover more lover than the air.
You care, you care as you twist my arms
round, till my songs become popsicle

and I wing out radiants of light all across
suburban lawns. You are right, the churning
is for you, for you are right, no one but you
I spin for all night, all day, restless for your

sight to pass across the lawn, tease grasses,
because I so like how you lay above me,
how I hovered beneath you, and we learned
some other way to say: There you are.

You strip the cut, splice it to strips, you mill
the wind, you scissor the air into ecstasy until
all lawns shimmer with your bluest energy.