SELF-PORTRAIT
AS MIRANDA WITH XENOPHILIA AND APOSTASY
The world begins with yes.
—Terry Tempest Williams
After a short courtship, we wed,
all according to Father’s plan,
then left the island—and Father—behind.
No, that’s not how the story goes.
But it’s how this story goes.
We left him with his angel
-conveyed magic books, his staff
unbroken, his Urim and Thummim
to translate the ancient
urge. We left old
feuds, martyrs who traversed
the waters, who pioneered
their way here. Loathe to leave,
we left, Prospero’s promises broke
like stormclouds pouring
pitch and feathers. Peeling them off,
we left cells—strata of ourselves—behind.
We left, stealthing Ariel and Caliban along,
misfits who burned to serve
no god but their gut, Ariel at the helm steering toward expanse,
Caliban in the crow’s nest aiming at the unnameable.
Brave? The ship tilted full bore toward horizon, the ledge
of a new world.
all according to Father’s plan,
then left the island—and Father—behind.
No, that’s not how the story goes.
But it’s how this story goes.
We left him with his angel
-conveyed magic books, his staff
unbroken, his Urim and Thummim
to translate the ancient
urge. We left old
feuds, martyrs who traversed
the waters, who pioneered
their way here. Loathe to leave,
we left, Prospero’s promises broke
like stormclouds pouring
pitch and feathers. Peeling them off,
we left cells—strata of ourselves—behind.
We left, stealthing Ariel and Caliban along,
misfits who burned to serve
no god but their gut, Ariel at the helm steering toward expanse,
Caliban in the crow’s nest aiming at the unnameable.
Brave? The ship tilted full bore toward horizon, the ledge
of a new world.
ABOUT THE POET
Writer,
editor, and logophile, Dayna Patterson makes
her home in the Pacific Northwest. She earned her MFA from Western Washington
University, where she served as the managing editor of Bellingham
Review. She is the poetry editor for Exponent II Magazine and
the founding editor-in-chief of Psaltery & Lyre. Her literary
obsessions include poetry and spirituality, and women in Shakespeare. DaynaPatterson.com
ABOUT SUGAR HOUSE REVIEW
We’ve loved reading the work that we’ve published (clearly), so now we want an opportunity to better hear our contributors. We will feature an audio recording of a poem from one of our seven issues, read by the poet and updated every couple of weeks. This an open invitation to all contributors from any of our issues, we were delighted to print your work, now we’re eager to hear it.
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