Photo courtesy Alessandra Carassas |
Introduction by Ted Kooser: While many of the poems
we feature in this column are written in open forms, that’s not to say I don’t
respect good writing done in traditional meter and rhyme. But a number of
contemporary poets, knowing how a rigid attachment to form can take charge of the
writing and drag the poet along behind, will choose, say, the traditional
villanelle form, then relax its restraints through the use of broken rhythm and
inexact rhymes. I’d guess that if I weren’t talking about it, you might not
notice, reading this poem by Floyd Skloot, that you were reading a sonnet.
Silent Music
My wife wears headphones as she plays
Chopin etudes in the winter light.
Singing random notes, she sways
in and out of shadow while night
settles. The keys she presses make a soft
clack, the bench creaks when her weight shifts,
golden cotton fabric ripples across
her shoulders, and the sustain pedal clicks.
This is the hidden melody I know
so well, her body finding harmony in
the give and take of motion, her lyric
grace of gesture measured against a slow
fall of darkness. Now stillness descends
to signal the end of her silent music.
Reprinted from “Prairie Schooner,” Volume 80, Number 2
(Summer, 2006) by permission of the University of Nebraska Press. Copyright ©
2006 by the University of Nebraska Press. Floyd Skloot’s most recent book is
“The End of Dreams,” 2006, Louisiana State University Press. This weekly column
is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and the
Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. We do not accept
unsolicited manuscripts.