1/4/2011

It’s still mostly dark when the first faint pink spot appears in the clouds: day advancing like a disease, slow and red. A raven croaks.

6 Comments


  1. Despedida de Soltera

    Three of my four music teachers were nuns. And the neighborhood referred to my very first piano teacher as the spinster– she wore dark clothing, sensible shoes, agua de colonia flor de naranja. She lived alone, with only part-time help; she never told anyone where she went in summer: “Soltera”. But I’ve always preferred its nod to solitude, to single-tude; the way impudent “l” pushes away from gossipy “o” and fakely coy “e” to bump up against “t” as if to say– So what? Years later, I’m still amazed at how much they knew: the libraries of trills and crescendos hidden underneath wimples and lace shawls; the ways they coaxed feeling from generations of wooden pupils surreptitiously kicking their legs into the piano’s soundboard. Listen to the advance of notes in this passage, they’d say: surf shirring the sand, or horses’ hooves soon coming around the bend. And then the clearing drenched in the scent of violets, which moves you inexplicably to tears. From my bedroom window, the chair backs in the garden are scrolled like treble clefs. It’s still mostly dark when the first faint pink spot appears in the clouds. I lie within that brief interval of solitude just before the day advances, slow and red. A raven croaks.

    ~ Luisa A. Igloria
    01 04 2011


  2. (Dave are you fine with me continuing to do this series? I am having so much fun right now I kind of don’t want to stop… Luisa)


    1. Of course!


  3. One slight change I want to make… how about “this nod to solitude” instead of “its nod to solitude” ? Thank you!



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