The Surrealist Learns To Fly

By Jennifer O'Grady b. 1963 Jennifer O'Grady
Occasionally he wakes, finds
the cool cube of his room
delirious with colors: blaring
daffodils and rigid roses,
petals a soft, translucent red
 
like the inside of an eyelid.
By the window, a clock's
expressionless face near glossy skins
of magazines, a telephone
the color of frozen milk
 
or silence, the color of old.
He is melting, his bones
grown paper-light, they travel
over the bed's pale hills, the woman
who's come to wash him.
 
The ceiling is a landscape
bleeding white as he floats
through the muted winter sky,
a boundless symbol of nothing.
The woman draws the blind.

Jennifer O’Grady, "The Surrealist Learns to Fly" from Poetry magazine. Reprinted by permission of the author.


Source: Poetry (March 1993).

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This poem originally appeared in the March 1993 issue of Poetry magazine

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March 1993

Biography

Jennifer O'Grady grew up in New York City. She holds a BA from Vassar and an MFA from Columbia University. Her first book of poems, White (1999), won the Mid-List Press First Series Award and a Greenwall grant from the Academy of American Poets. Her poems have appeared in many publications including Harper's magazine, the Yale Review, the Georgia Review, the Kenyon Review, Seneca Review, Southwest Review, The Writer's Almanac . . .

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Poems by Jennifer O'Grady

Poem Categorization

SUBJECT Growing Old, Painting & Sculpture, The Body

POET’S REGION U.S., Mid-Atlantic

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