we stopped studying the night sky for directions if someone said we made it up planet Earth isn’t real we would try to verify try to be sure critics are the evidence we do not trust ourselves your imagination is asking for parole what is your verdict Warden try to always remember the calendar made of light our ancestors followed to pass the year
This is a poem about what the skeptic loses — imagination, along with a necessary connection to ancient practices. How are we to believe in Earth if we can’t believe in the Heavens? In the plodding directionlessness of the present, we are lost without the astral maps. I want to point out too CAConrad’s signature care for the visual impact of the poem. The disciplined shaping means that the poetic line here not only carries sound and sentiment but builds toward a striking sculptural presence. CAConrad’s is poetry that reaches for multidimensionality, and in this poem, the arc and increment of indentation is a convincer, moving with and toward the poem’s conclusion. (This poem first appeared in Copenhagen Magazine.)