My father tells me when I am married I will learn a new trick: by Tiffany St. John

to make the sun shine brighter

by my relative dimness, to reflect
the light of a lover, to speak

in the tones a cattail speaks in,
to be the plain, but not the wind across it.

Sometimes, he says, you can be completely invisible.

He tells me to be a toothless
lion, to wait

in the paleness of night for a brassy star
to overpower me.

Joy is in the sacrifice,
he says. My father says. My father

who has never been pollen, carried
from one stamen

to another, who does not lie like a needle in a pile
the size of a haystack, or been strings plucked

until the sound waves grew cancerous,
who has never steamed away, singular

into something plural, into pocket-sized ghosts,
who has never been erased from photographs

or been a moon.

Tiffany St. John is an eager pursuer and peruser of Poetry, Psychology, and Philosophy. She lives with her husband and two cats in Columbus, Ohio. She has been published in Black Warrior Review and awaits publication in the upcoming anthology Poetry on Loss through Little Lantern Press.


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Comments

3 responses to “My father tells me when I am married I will learn a new trick: by Tiffany St. John”

  1. Marilyn Flower Avatar
    Marilyn Flower

    I find the sentiment honest and the words to express the sentiment, just right

  2. Eleanor Kedney Avatar

    I enjoyed your poem very much. I, too, await publication in the upcoming anthology Poetry on Loss by Little Lantern Press. I will look for your poem when I get my copy.

    1. therumbling Avatar

      Thank you, Eleanor. I will look out for your poem as well!

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