"Tappan Chair" by Jane Duran, Featured in American Sampler
In early 2014, at the same time as we were wrapping up our successful Kickstarter campaign, we were contacted by Jane about the upcoming publication of her new book, American Sampler, and the poem therein entitled "Tappan Chair". Inspired by her childhood memories of New Hampshire and a passage about Tappan Chairs in the 1940's work Hands that Built New Hampshire, Jane honors us with her poetry, and we are grateful to present it here with her permission.
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"Tappan Chair"
Those who would live in this landscape grow tall, deep, impervious too, even laconic, splitting maple, turning white ash on a lathe, stripping brown ash from swampland, steaming, gouging, pounding, bending, post, rung and slat and all the time the wood so worked makes a general, unpatterned noise, a forest noise of force and flourishing so the carpenter’s heart beats faster then stern and steady in the making of a high-backed rocking chair. |
Available through Enitharmon Press; poem printed with permission.
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