Secrets of Weather \u0026 Hope by Sue Sinclair


Secrets of Weather \u0026 Hope
Title : Secrets of Weather \u0026 Hope
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1894078152
ISBN-10 : 9781894078153
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 92
Publication : First published July 1, 2001

Cumulus These are the carriers.
Their large, mild bodies make us think
of domesticity, of milk. Mammalian
they hold the rain in their bellies, a generous
temperament. They too are susceptible
to time, but more graceful than us.
Unafraid, they will let go
when they must. They breathe
more deeply and know something
of sadness. Their bodies are sympathetic.
Rain is what they know best and least.

Sue Sinclair's poems speak from that precise place where our perception of the world and our capacity for language meet and embrace, where our sense of experience goes to get sharpened and refreshed. That experience might involve the inner lives of clouds, the flourishing and passing of a tulip, the evocative scent of wolf willow, or the intricate arts of Bach and Virginia Woolf. These poems are deft, musical, and quick in the moment, alive to the sensuous surface and the meditative depth, their antennae fully extended.


Secrets of Weather \u0026 Hope Reviews


  • M.W.P.M.

    It is winter.
    The room is white.
    Do not strain your voice.
    We can make do.

    Light is hard and clean
    but not unsparing
    as we had thought.

    The angels have not
    forgotten. Close your eyes.
    You have gotten used to silence.

    - Bone, pg. 28

    * * *

    Nothing to cast a shadow
    up there, building pale
    and glittering, fascinated
    by themselves and a little
    ashamed. Far back in their minds
    they know they have arrived empty-handed
    but pretend they're not yet
    where they want to be, wherever
    that is. Sometimes, watching a pair
    of starlings swoop and duck, they almost
    admit it, give in to doubt. A kind of vertigo.
    It's the heat, we say, that makes them
    waver, and they ignore it too, wait
    for it to pass. Be taller,
    they say to themselves,
    be taller, because that is the only way
    they know how to think.
    - Toronto Skyline, pg. 49

    * * *

    Too small to worry.
    Asking not why
    but when. A garden
    of underdeveloped
    shapes. Hydroponics
    in the sky, vegetables
    in their first flower:
    white: albino squash,
    starry-eyed cucumbers,
    pea blossoms. They form
    in regular rows, peer
    down from the sky
    wondering what they will do
    when the time comes.
    - Altocumulus Undulatus, pg. 57