Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login


Solar Eclipse Each morning I wake invisible. I make a needle from a porcupine quill, sew feet to legs, lift spine onto my thighs. I put on my rib and collarbone. I pin an ear to my head, hear the waxwing's yellow cry. I open my mouth for purple berries, stick on periwinkle eyes. I almost know what it is to be seen. My throat enlarges from anger. I make a hand to hold my pain. My heart a hole the size of the sun's eclipse. I push through the dark circle's tattered edge of light. All day I struggle with one hair after another until the moon moves from the face of the sun and there is a strange light as though from a kerosene lamp in a cabin. I pun on a dress, a shawl over my shoulders. My threads knotted and scissors gleaming. Now I know I am seen. I have a shadow. I extend my arms, dance and chant in the sun's new light. I put a hat and coat on my shadow, another larger dress. I put on more shawls and blouses and underskirts until even the shadow has substance


Diane Glancy


#eclipse #resilience #scorched-edges #shamanism #ymir



Quote by Diane Glancy

Read through all quotes from Diane Glancy



About Diane Glancy





Did you know about Diane Glancy?

[citation needed]
Glancy is an English professor and began teaching in 1989 at Macalester College in St. Works


Novels and prose works
Stone Heart: A Novel of Sacajawea Overlook Press (2003)
The Cold-and-Hunger Dance U Nebraska Press (2002)
Designs of the Night Sky U Nebraska Press (2002)
The Mask Maker: A Novel U Oklahoma Press (2002)
The Man Who Heard the Land Minnesota Historical Society Press (2001)
David: Taken from the New International Version of the Bible IBS Publishing (2000)
Fuller Man Moyer Bell Ltd. Awards
American Book Award;
Pushcart Prize;
Capricorn Prize for Poetry;
Native American Prose Award;
Charles Nilon Fiction Award;
Five Civilized Tribes Playwrighting Prize;
North American Indian Prose Award;
The Minnesota Book Award in Poetry; and
Oklahoma Book Award.

back to top