SurVision Magazine |
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An
international online magazine that
publishes Surrealist poetry
in English.
Issue Eight
CAITIE BARRETT Ta Phantasmata (The Ghosts) I was wearing this landscape buttoned up tightly around me, but I got warm and took it off. Now I don't know where I am. Quick, bring me a city, any city. The cold slab of the shoreline is too hard to sit on without some cushion. A city on the coast, then, at an hour late enough that the world inland no longer exists. Piraeus shrugs its long black shoulder at the long black sea. And a room, dark except for the orange light on the space heater. This room is haunted by the heat; my mouth is haunted by dead languages; my body is haunted by myself; and all around this gray apartment building the smooth air circles round, stroking its forehead, reassuring it that it is loved, all night long. The sky has hardened and the ground has softened. The rain dissolves the cars and leaves only headlights, constellations of pure white globes whose lights all merge together in the crowded roads: gentle, cool, dissolving at their edges, all these perfect spheres. Caitie Barrett lives in Ithaca, NY, where she teaches at Cornell University as an Associate Professor of Classics. She is also a professional archaeologist. Her poetry appears in Can We Have Our Ball Back, IthacaLit, Philadelphia Stories, Tales from the Forest, as well as in Bow & Arrow Press and Pressed Wafer Press editions. She is also the author of two nonfiction books on archaeology: Egyptianizing Figurines from Delos: A Study in Hellenistic Religion (Brill, 2011) and Domesticating Empire: Egyptian Landscapes in Pompeian Gardens (Oxford University Press, 2019). In 2020, she received the Orison Anthology Award in Poetry. |
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