A Poem by Carrie Etter
These Days
for Sarah Watkinson
A week alone in Norham, two-
pub village on its way to one-,
I opened every window; I courted
flies and bumblebees and
the swifts nesting under
the back eaves just to see
that cursive up close.
Yet to ask is to receive
something else: tortoiseshell
butterfly after butterfly
—this one keeping watch
over me all night,
this one in the lounge
as I read Angela Carter.
When the weather cooled, I
closed up and yet
expected wings at the glass,
black and orange
omens of possibility.
Carrie Etter is an American expatriate living in Bath and teaching creative writing at the University of Bristol. Her most recent collection, The Weather in Normal (UK: Seren; US: Station Hill, 2018), is a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, and individual poems have appeared in The New Republic, The New Statesman, The Penguin Book of the Prose Poem, Poetry Review, and the TLS, among others. She also edited Infinite Difference: Other Poetries by UK Women Poets (Shearsman, 2010), a TLS Book of the Year, and her former student Linda Lamus's posthumous collection, A Crater the Size of Calcutta (Mulfran, 2015). She also writes short fiction, essays, and reviews.