Genevieve Payne
Poetry
Genevieve Payne received her MFA from Syracuse University where she was awarded the Leonard Brown Prize in poetry. Her recent work has appeared or is forthcoming in The End, Bennington Review, Nashville Review, and elsewhere.
In Amsterdam
I was lonely and cold.
Singular, I was erasable.
It snowed in Amsterdam and in the hostel
each night a strange man snored.
The noise was a hand or a hand that held me
to myself like a mirror holds us up to ourselves.
At the park and in the ice bar and at the small carnival
with shrill lights and rolled pastries,
I wore a thick coat borrowed from Italy
and was displaced and amassed at once.
I took myself to the floating flower shops and let
strange syllables oust the words I knew.
So tethered to the sorrow in myself I didn’t see
the museum of the man who cut off his own ear
to gift to his lover in a case for renewal.
In Amsterdam, the canals opened wide
and the Dutch drawbridges were clustered
with locks meant to signify love
though they came to seem more
like an argument
or shed body parts, less alive than alone.
The ear was a flower, the ear was recourse for a lover.
But I had nothing—I sent nothing home.