Dominion
So close to understanding everything, we lacked
only the verb.
We had agency, that much was clear.
Why else would soft mists rise to decorate
the creek, halo the river?
Being water, we needed water, so why else
the rain, except to bless us,
fill our wells and cisterns, refill our sense
of superiority? We had been given dominion.
This was known.
These spectacular landscapes were designated
backgrounds
for our glorious rages and desires. Only the verb
remained inscrutable.
Only the verb stuck to the shadows,
skittered outside the circle
of our fires, eluded the sure grasp
of our opposable thumbs. We began to wonder,
to question, but distractibility
came hand-in-hand with cleverness.
In the end, we had no idea what to do,
how to prove
to the world and ourselves
that the world was indeed our dominion,
except to ruin it,
because that was our right.
So we ruined it.
Nightfall
In the small walled garden
of precisely right now,
a wild bird keeps knocking
its whole hollow-boned
richly feathered being
hard against an old pane
gleaming in a shed’s
window, the slow press
of darkness descending
over the luxuriant heads
of hydrangea blossoms
bent low to ground
by heavy rain— this hour
when all sorrows are the same.
Hayden Saunier’s most recent book is A Cartography of Home (Terrapin: 2021). Her work has been published in journals such as 32 Poems, Beloit Poetry Journal, Plume, Thrush, Virginia Quarterly Review, and has been awarded the Rattle Poetry Prize, Pablo Neruda Prize, and Gell Award, among others. She directs No River Twice, an interactive, audience-driven poetry reading/performance. More online at www.haydensaunier.com.
Published April 15 2023