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Beauty in the Moment


Article # : 17018 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 8 / 1990  890 Words
Author : Cornelia Hoogland
A widely published poet, Cornelia Hoogland teaches English at Mt. Royal College in Calgary, Alberta, and is review editor of Dandelion.

       Angel in the Library
       (for Cheryl)
       
       It's the only place you find people and silence
       at the same time. People quit before the word, so quiet
       thoughts come. Thoughts always attract angels.
       
       The girl with the blackrimmed glasses, the Cowichan sweater,
       sits on the floor between stacks. Book open on her lap,
       she argues death with Lowell. The angel leans close.
       
       The girl's hair was not always this color. It's been peroxide blonde,
       copper, and cut weird too. Drugs were a problem. As a child she prayed
       Let me die before I wake. They stood by in their ponytails,
       
       Winter coats, hands folded attentively in front of them, but what
       could they do? They wrestle with one, allow a hip to be put out
       with another. And the girl? She's here, isn't she.
       
       
       Night Windows
       
       Grandfather, I'm already out of your world as you hush
       towards death. You haven't left mine.
       My reflection in the night window reminds of you
       thousands of miles ahead of me.
       
       With you there and me here I hardly got to know you,
       Already too big for your lap when we finally met,
       and only once did I sleep in the attic room
       on Kalverstraat. What a scare to come home late
       and hear pitching from the dark Waar ben jij geweest?*
       No lights on, nothing except your crusty impatience.
       Yet you'd been hours at the bay window
       of that room in which drapes were never
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