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Flat Ink Magazine
If I Kept It

If I Kept It

 

 

If I kept it—

Say, for a rainy day—

What good would it do me

The summer I turned 17,

When the sun appeared,

An orange light orbiting

The barn we chose

To feed the fire.

 

If I kept it

In a box of thread—

And never learned to sew—

How would I know life

Held secret after secret,

Each worth the gold spent,

No longer pretending

Love needs a name.

 

 


Bart Edelman’s poetry collections include Crossing the Hackensack (Prometheus Press), Under Damaris’ Dress (Lightning Publications), The Alphabet of Love (Red Hen Press), The Gentle Man (Red Hen Press), The Last Mojito (Red Hen Press), The Geographer’s Wife (Red Hen Press), Whistling to Trick the Wind (Meadowlark Press), and This Body Is Never at Rest: New and Selected Poems 1993 – 2023 (Meadowlark Press). He has taught at Glendale College, where he edited Eclipse, a literary journal, and, most recently, in the MFA program at Antioch University, Los Angeles. His work has been widely anthologized in textbooks published by City Lights Books, Etruscan Press, Fountainhead Press, Harcourt Brace, Longman, McGraw-Hill, Prentice Hall, Simon & Schuster, Thomson/Heinle, the University of Iowa Press, Wadsworth, and others. He lives in Pasadena, California.

 

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  • On Craft
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  • Non-Fiction
  • Prose & Poetry
    • Issue #1: Alternate Endings
    • Issue #2: In The Margins
    • Issue #3
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