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February 10, 2016
 

Downstairs in Dreams

 
Chase Twichell
illustration

About This Poem

 

“My father was a Latin teacher, so at bedtime we got the classic myths and stories from The Odyssey, including a variety of creatures half-human, half-animal. Centaurs in particular fascinated me because they were both horses (longed for) and mature male sexual beings (feared). The poem cages childhood trauma in myth and dream, which acknowledges and preserves the fact of it but keeps it safely remote and unreal.”
—Chase Twichell

 

Chase Twichell is the author of Horses Where the Answers Should Have Been: New & Selected Poems (Copper Canyon Press, 2010). She splits her time between the Adirondacks of northern New York and Miami Beach.

 

Photo credit: Margaret Miller

more-at-poets

Poetry by Twichell

 

Horses Where the Answers Should Have Been

(Copper Canyon Press, 2010)

"The Hand" by Mary Ruefle

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"First Gestures" by Julia Spicher Kasdorf

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"Why Latin Should Still Be Taught in High School" by Christopher Bursk

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Poem-a-Day

 

Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-a-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends.