What lyrical poetry can doâbut rarely doesâsounds impossible. It can blur the distinction between thought and feeling, between speech and song. And though it canât stop time, it can give the moment a form that lasts. Linda Pastanâs poetry does all these things.
When she died this winter at the age of 90, Pastan left us 15 exquisite booksâfrom A Perfect Circle of Sun (1971) to Almost an Elegy (2022). For those of us who knew her, the poems in these volumes have a different aura now. Thereâs something new in their spare lines, always mysterious and lovelyâa new poignancy, a new eeriness, which may be the memory of her living voice.
In her books, sheâs free of time. Sheâs a girl in her childhood bedroom, a young mother, a grieving daughter. Sheâs at a window in her house in the woods, watching the leaves fallâor itâs the end of summer and sheâs leaving the island. In her books, sheâs every age she ever was…the queen of a rainy country.
Moment has been honored to feature Linda Pastanâs work over the years. In the last weeks of her life, she wrote a poem called âThe Mysteriesâ and shared it with me. Itâs a last word of sorts, an almost serene confession of bafflement. How to explain our bounded lives with their joys and griefs? How to explain our intractable illusions? Weâre grateful to the Pastan family for allowing us to publish this poem for the first time.
âJody Bolz, Poetry Editor
THE MYSTERIES
How to explain the poem
that writes itself after
the final poem, after
the book has closed;
the breath
after a sheet covers
the still face,
the sheet itself seeming to flicker.
Or the green leaf emerging
in coldest winter on a branch
that seemed dead
but was simply biding its time.
How to explain endings
that come even before
beginnings.
We know the earth
circles the sun,
but here at the window, my eyes
tell me that itâs the sun sinking
in the elusive west.
Linda Pastan (1932-2023) was the author of 15 books of poetry. Twice nominated for the National Book Award, Pastan taught at the Bread Loaf Writersâ Conference for 20 years, served as poet laureate of Maryland from 1991-1995 and received the Ruth Lilly Prize for lifetime achievement.Â
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3 thoughts on “Poem | The Mysteries”
Beautiful. Beginnings promise. Endings deceive, until faith defeats it in an eternal return to life.
What to say when all has been said
What to do when all has been done
Confusion reigns
When we attempt to fill the void
That does not exist
The superlative lies
In letting things be what they are
Thank you for sharing Linda Pastan’s incomparable work with me