You Will Miss Most Things

How much more will I sow and never eat?
goes the idiot’s question. Which merits
an idiot’s answer: how much time is there
in the universe? You will miss most things,
but it’s not your fault. Out there, the limit
is light, and what you can see by it. Down here,
pressure makes most of the ocean an X.
But absence is different from loss. Most springs
have not been taken, just missed. By reflex
I grieve those mild mists, those sunny snowfalls.
By reflex, the grey-blue Broad-Billed Parrots.
But we don’t dream about them. We don’t wake,
wishing we had a record of their calls.
We don’t call for them. We don’t call this an ache. 

 
Claire Wahmanholm

Claire Wahmanholm is the author of Wilder (Milkweed Editions 2018), Redmouth (Tinderbox Editions 2019), and the forthcoming Meltwater (Milkweed Editions 2023). Her work has most recently appeared in, or is forthcoming from, Cream City Review, TriQuarterly, Sierra, Ninth Letter, Blackbird, Washington Square Review, Copper Nickel, and Beloit Poetry Journal. She was a 2020-2021 McKnight Writing Fellow, and is the winner of the 2022 Montreal International Poetry Prize. Claire lives in the Twin Cities.

Previous
Previous

How Do We Name This

Next
Next

The Field Is Hot and Hotter