Toggle Menu

The Children’s Museum

It's hard to know whether today or yesterday was the full moon; excitement isn't rigorous. It's just river-silvering

Ange Mlinko

March 1, 2007

It’s hard to know whether today or yesterday was the full moon; excitement isn’t rigorous. It’s just river-silvering

blent with the odor of silt where the roofs spike along a repurposed waterfront.

A beach ball floats above the pressurized stream; it is disequilibrium that keeps it there. Soap’s expressed

as blisters when even gravity works backwards at the limit of the ball held upside down inside the loop.

Rewards in a game they play against themselves –“Fancy curtseying as you’re falling through the air”–

the shade breaks up beneath the oaks tithing their gifts against the curriculum

of an armed galaxy. It slides into focus for the instant I’m brrr, blurred.

Ange MlinkoAnge Mlinko is poetry editor of The Nation and the author of Marvelous Things Overheard (FSG). She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Randall Jarrell Award for criticism, and teaches poetry at the University of Florida.


Latest from the nation