Cousin Marjorie Poem by Fred Davis Chappell

Cousin Marjorie



Oh when she's there she's so immensely there
No color but her own, no voice but hers,
No other nature can advance itself;
She is the noontime that absorbs the day-moon.

Large in every sense, rich, overblown,
Rose that droops from surfeit of itself;
Bright flowing dresses brave as carnival bunting:
All Marjorie's grand Everything is here.

The dimpled hands, the sensual smile, the stare
That takes you in as warmly as a perfume,
All sympathy and calm attentiveness:
So much herself it seems she has no self

But only Presence that if taken away
Would cause such lessening of the sense of place
You'd think the room was now no more itself
But only a diminished facsimile:

A room wherein a chamber symphony
Played Schubert for an hour and then removed,
The chairs left emptier than before they came.
So much herself she is wild Selflessness,

Has no more concept of a Marjorie
Than has a waterfall, a sunbaked stone,
The dew-strung spider web, the snuffling spaniel,
The rain-wet sweet gum spread-armed in City Park.

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Fred Davis Chappell

Fred Davis Chappell

Canton, North Carolina
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