"The Unmarked Graves at Grandview Cemetery" by Daniel Schonning

The Unmarked Graves at Grandview Cemetery 

“Longing 
Not that I want to be a god or a hero. 
Just to change into a tree, to grow for ages, not hurt anyone.” 
– Czesław Miłosz, “Notes” 

 I. 

The day moon is thin, 
its center windowpane-clear. 

Pale needlebeds crevice 
the weathered asphalt path, 
pool beneath lodgepole pines. 

In the trees’ distant crowns, 
shafts of light are turning. 

The empty sandstone plaques 
stand mostly in pairs— 

lids of
closed eyes. 

Clouds drag their shoulders across the glade, 

their soft-edged forms 
like figures seen 
through water. 


Silence itself is a body 
of horseshoe crabs 

concealing 
copper-blue blood. 

II.

Lodgepoles carry their days 
in their soft white stomachs— 

their soft white stomachs 
wet with rain. 

Their roots reach out 
and the earth reaches over. 

My grandmother stood like that: 
Summers in Rhode Island 

while evenings darkened and grew thin. 

Her feet planted 
where water turns 

to sand. 
Her hands folded. 

Her head 
a box of light. 

If a word is an object, 
it grows in the mouth. 

Daffodil buds tender my tongue, heavy 
at their heads. 

III.

Sunlight splinters itself 

against the moon, the stone, 
the lodgepole bark 

like rain against glass. 

Thickets of daffodils 
crowd the path, 

tilting their pendular heads. 

I walk— 

parallax 
sets the far mountains moving. 

Wind drives west 
and the lodgepoles lurch east 

breath 
pulls opposite the blood. 

The grave markers drift. 
The needlebeds ripple. 



And the moon so taut, it might be 
humming. 

ξ

“The Unmarked Graves at Grandview Cemetery" first appeared in The Pinch.

Daniel Schonning’s poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Orion Magazine, The Yale Review, Poetry Magazine, and elsewhere. His poem, “Aleph with all, all with Aleph,” was selected by judge Cyrus Cassells as winner of Crazyhorse's 2020 Lynda Hull Memorial Prize. He works and writes in Colorado.


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