https://sweetlit.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/L.-Camp-No-Reason-1.mp3

No Reason but Cabin and Hidden

I drove four state lines from home because my heart
can be singular. At dusk, the outstretched town
switches on its bats. Tiny lamps spill footpaths.

That I intended to be away, to look at myself
as what happens meant I lugged eight boxes of hunger
to woods soaked in mammals, smudged owls.

I drove right into a starched lunatic wind,
which was all honesty. The horizon became a line
to practice, a predicament

to unwind, to build multiple syllables.
Indeed there was effort. I trawled curves of cut cliffs to remember
this year as sustenance

and held to the ordinary last words
of five psalms. The human voice diminished. Only a cloud-
rapt sky and windscript tearing up

every bubble-necked creek. Here, I reassembled
a beginning. I woke to a list no one kept on a wall
and erased. It was possible to be seen

with binoculars and slight lacerations, watching buffalo
as amulet. Around me, the planet’s surface is storm, gummed stars,
a faithful distance. Once I’d been here

three days, I could remember the earth as apology.
Copses were careless with purpose. No need
but opposite direction and the sound it makes.


https://sweetlit.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/L.-Camp-What-Fell-1.mp3

What Fell

When I open the fridge this morning, still in the slow
engine of sleep, a nearly full bottle
of Malbec cupped in the door suddenly tumbles

and cracks on the tile, throwing sticky
dark fluid and claiming pale
carpet. We crouch to collect jagged vessel-

and force-shattered glass, clutching red
in our treads as we work. All day
I’ll be pulling shards that embedded

the berber. All day, blotting radical
marks with old towels. Outside is nursing
that year-end shudder

of wind. The wind is so harsh at the gate
of the desert. That particular wine
was robust. Spilled, suddenly my house and life

and everything seems opened
to warning. At the window, the sun comes fully on
like an unpocketed plum. My cousin’s son

died yesterday. He jumped
from a bridge when the map of his heart
couldn’t take its direction. Dawn was thick

as iron. Not yet drinking
its distance. The boy left meticulous notes for his family
and thirteen friends. He’d turned in
his term paper, tidied his room.


Lauren Camp is the author of five books, most recently Took House (Tupelo Press). Honors include the Dorset Prize and finalist citations for the Arab American Book Award and the North American Book Award. Her poems have appeared in New England Review, Prairie Schooner, Poet Lore, Kenyon Review and Beloit Poetry Journal, and her work has been translated into Mandarin, Turkish, Spanish, Serbian and Arabic.

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