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Joanne the Poet - The Poetry of Joanne M. Clarkson

Poem called “Velvet” in THIMBLE

My poem “Velvet” about my first memory of the feel of fabric is in the current issue of Thimble Journal. You can read it and the whole issue at http://thimblelitmag.com.

My grandmother sewed many of my clothes when I was a child. She once made me a red of red velvet. I loved that coat so much for its rich color but mostly, I think, for its blissful softness.

I still love beautiful fabric. Here is the poem:

Velvet

The earliest pleasure I remember

     is velvet. My grandmother

         sewed a little red coat for me.

Softness unlike plush or cotton

      or even the robe my morning

            mother wore.

I was too young to know age

      has a number or that the coat

was something I could outgrow.

Since, I have stroked the fur of a puppy’s

      ear. Smoothed warm, fine

           beach sand. Thumbed

a polished stone. I have cupped

the burn of snow and run my open hand

      through the sundown wind

but have never quite found the same

           harmony of nerve endings.

I came closest with a lover’s skin.

And have learned that if you stroke the nap

       of woven silk backwards

            it ruins everything.

 Fingertips erode with age, touch

      roughened into a crude braille.

I find feelings now mostly in a word:

          the name of the fabric

               of a little red coat.

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