Joel Peckham

ANY MOONWALKER CAN TELL YOU

 

All these constellations are your, they exist in you; outside your love they have no reality!  

                                                                          Milosz

About the poetics of space.  Bachelard would say,

that every poet staring out the window is displaced in place, the universe

outside the

              glass rippling away from an imagined center, a

dream state—each leaf on the hillside rustling with reverie, in the way

a candle flame can set an angel spinning and flashing on a carousel of tin.

Each little

              room

a universe: the piled papers on the desk, the cooling coffee cup among the

empty

               coffee cups, the browning overwatered spider plants which, if

understood

              for all their history would tell not just one story, but everything

back to the

              first footprint in the dust, the first flower blooming outward ever-

expanding

 

to the last sun’s death. But it can work the other way immensity on all

sides

               pointing, pushing in. Inside  

 

their suits, staring through their plastic shells

toward home, 251,000 miles away,

did the men on that cold rock—like Milosz,

confronted with “the garden of the wonders of space” receive that joy of

solitude,

those waters spread for miles in every direction among the stars floating

and flying—

             and stretch

their arms and leap

 

like divers from some cliff. Or reflecting on the tiny ball,

half-swallowed in their own open mouths, were they

afraid?

Oberlin, Ohio 

June, 2019

Joel Peckham, Jr. has published seven books of poetry and nonfiction, most recently God's Bicycle and Body Memory. Individual poems have appeared recently in or are forthcoming in Prairie Schooner, The Southern Review, The Sugar House Review, Cave Wall, The Beloit Poetry Journal and many others. Currently he is editing an anthology of ecstatic poetry for New Rivers Press, titled Wild Gods: The Ecstatic in American Poetry and Prose. His newest collection, Bone Music, is forthcoming in 2021 from Stephen F. Austin University Press. He is an Associate Professor of English Literature at Marshall University where he teaches a broad range of courses in Creative Writing and American Literature. He lives in Huntington West Virginia with his wife, Rachael and son Darius, both accomplished poets and essayists... Full Profile