UA Press home


www.uapress.com 
search


   Buy this book
Walking through the Horizon

 

Walking through the HorizonWalking Through the Horizon
Poems by Margaret Holley

The adventure of moving, the meaning of home

The UA Press Poetry Series

"Peonies"


Attachment to the familiar and the challenge of leaving it for new horizons link the poems in this collection by Margaret Holley. The poems are full of feeling and wisdom in equal parts, and are enriched and informed by the poet’s landscape, whether it is Switzerland or Arizona. The landscape, in fact, becomes a kind of mirror we gaze into to see the future that at every turn is approaching and moving through us to illuminate the past.

The journey of this book shows how the conditions of our lives are illumined by our cultural forbears—Goethe, Chopin, Nietzsche, Bonnard, Klee—by the heritage of personal memory, and by the ever amazing “book of nature.” A book remarkable for the complete authenticity of its feeling and candor, Walking Through the Horizon shows us the simultaneity of the past and the future and is grounds for hopefulness and joy: “These are gifts worth passing on: / the beckoning vista, the sudden frontier, / the rivers of days and years to come.”


“In her beautiful new collection of poems Margaret Holley writes with a rare and compelling intensity of her move to a new city and a new life. She does this by creating vivid contrasts between dailiness and an expansive vision beyond it—the immediate, sometimes chaotic, world of the present and the permanence of art and myth.”

— Grace Schulman

“Holley deserves a wider audience.”

— Mary Oliver, author of Why I Wake Early

“Margaret Holley’s new poems seem to partake both of the leaf-shadow of the old Northeast and of the stunned sunlight of the new Southwest. The scars of ordinary human experience are everywhere apparent, but are ameliorated by the balance and temperance of her language. Holley’s westward migration, in Walking Through the Horizon, is a quintessentially American passage out of childhood and into adulthood.”

— Karl Kirchwey, author of The Engrafted Word and At the Palace of Jove


March 2006
96 pages
5 1/2" x 8 1/2"
$16.00 Paper
ISBN-10: 1-55728-812-7
ISBN-13: 978-1-55728-812-7
Poetry

Margaret Holley works in Scottsdale, Arizona, for the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science. She was formerly director of the creative writing program at Bryn Mawr. Her previous poetry collections are The Smoke Tree (Winner of the Bluestem Award), Morning Star, Kore in Bloom, and Beyond Me. She is also the author of The Poetry of Marianne Moore: A Study in Voice and Value.


Peonies

Where muck and worms and rampant weeds
have offered up these pink-white flowers
to a cut-glass vase, where their fragrant bed

and yours have slept side by side through more
seasons than you’ve ever found names for,
slept and wakened—you have grown attached

to this piece of ground. Where the red stalks
have shot up past periwinkles, hauling their recipe
for big-headed, overstuffed, swan-feathered elegance

into this meadow you’ve learned to call home,
here you are, about to leave, and not ready to.
Where the peonies’ pale ruffles first opened

their boudoirs in the back rooms of your brain
and lit their moony globes in your sleeping forest,
you are having to be instructed yet again

in attachment: how the river clings to its banks,
how wings hold onto the rushing air, how
these blooms at the height of their glory say

Watch this! and bow their enormous heads
all the way down. Does this sound like dying?
Don’t believe it. Practice departure, they say,

and you are already packing, blinking away rain,
mist, a blur of complacency, thinking your last
hopes have all finally wilted and crashed.

Remember how snow disappeared? Here it is,
a whole vaseful unfurling its cumulus, cupping
your face in its cool flesh and sweet winter breath.

 

shopping cart site map