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Friday, January 24, 2014

Poem-A-Day: Stairway to Heaven by Alison Hawthorne Deming

January 24, 2014
Stairway to Heaven

 
The queen grows fat beneath my house 
while drones infest the walls 
 
reconnaissance to feed her glut, 
wood ripped from studs and joists. 
 
I'll pay to drill the slab and ruin 
her pestilential nest. How to find 
 
the song in this day's summons? 
I've been accused of darkness 
 
by my inner light. My brother sits 
in the chemo chair another long day 
 
of toxic infusion, the house of his body-- 
bones, brain and balls gone skeltering. 
 
I sit in my parked car listening 
to Robert Plant recall how the English 
 
envied the Americans for getting 
the blues, getting all of it, into song. 
 
I remember the dream where 
brother and sister, adult and equal, 
 
lean and white as lilies, as bare, 
dove into a mountain lake, black water, 
 
high elevation, fir trees growing 
in flood water that had joined 
 
two lakes into one. Do you ever dream 
of animals, I ask him, hospice bed 
 
looking out on a plywood squirrel 
perched on cement block wall. 
 
Frequently. A lilt of surprising joy. What kind? 
Mostly the jungle animals. Then: I'm going 
 
to do my exercises now. What exercises? 
I like pacing, he said, immobilized 
 
upon his death nest of nine pillows. 
Then he closed his eyes to become the inward one 
 
whose only work was to wear a pathway 
back and forth within his enclosure.

 

 

Copyright © 2014 by Alison Hawthorne Deming. Used with permission of the author.

About This Poem 

"I can't seem to stop carrying my brother around on my back since he died in May 2011. I think of the way Aeneas carried his father Anchises out of defeat, but the stuff of my days is all here on the horizontal plane: termites, cancer, Led Zeppelin, and my devotion to the animal world. These all fell together one day into this poem."

--Alison Hawthorne Deming  

Most Recent Book by Deming





(Penguin Books, 2009)

 

 

 

 

Poem-A-Day
Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-A-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends. Browse the Poem-A-Day Archive.  
 

Alison Hawthorne Deming is the author of four books of poetry, most recently Rope (Penguin Books, 2009). She is professor and director of creative writing at the University of Arizona in Tucson. 


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