“Watching that ol’ river flow” by Anne Archer
Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets' daily poetry dispatch. Read "Watching that ol’ river flow" by Anne Archer.
An AI takes in ten thousand cat videos
By Anne Archer
i
That first summer of your
forgetting—names
sloughed off like
so much dead skin
is there a choice?
(memory like the house guest who
puts the carving knife
in the wrong drawer, memory
the knife in the wrong drawer)
if you don’t remember you’ll improvise
some wordless melody, pieces
of you, beloved:
chk a dee dee chk a dee
ii
Analogy is the bedfellow
of early Alzheimer’s, like
finding another word for whatchamacallit
eee bejeee bejeee eee bejeee bejeee
Is there a right way to hang laundry?
A branch snags
a scrap of your shirt
The pots on the verandah rearrange themselves as
you circle back on the trail, walking
widdershins instead of clockwise
All night the slither and crunch, sounds
truant as a melody or memory-
the current washing over you
Copyright © Anne Archer
Previously published in Anti-Heroin Chic.
Anne Archer (aka Archer Lundy) is a poet and musician who lives on unceded Algonquin Territory near Sharbot Lake, Ontario. She is the author of 3 books of poetry, including EMMALINE/EVANGELINE (Woodpecker Lane Press, 2023) and plays flutes and whistles in SHENANIGANS with Jon McLurg and CACCIA with Chris Giguere. Her recent poetry appears in Anti-Heroin Chic, Pinhole, Devour, Otherwise Engaged, and In The Mood Magazine.
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