POSTCARD
Sky of new snow open
like eternity. Numinous,
benign. All
day wind moves the day
along. January still
blank as if unbegun. I’ve
come to face it—
I have to live and go on
living. With the
knowledge
oblivion excludes me,
apart from
brief, fathomless sleep. This
unshakable quiet
I am told is peace. For you,
I count the blessings
which stitch me to this
earth. Lacework
of time. Pines feathered
and faithful as swans.
This morning, I woke
and pain, a while, stayed
dreaming.
Children unknowable to me
left before my seeing
angels in the yard.
I’ve been aware of Tunisian-American poet Leila Chatti for a while, but hadn’t seen a collection until this latest, Wildness Before Something Sublime (Port Townsend WA: Copper Canyon Press, 2026), a follow-up to her Deluge (Copper Canyon Press, 2020). “This book was written when I wasn’t writing. This is what I said, anyway—I’m not writing. Yet, of course,” her “AUTHOR’S NOTE” at the offset begins, “these poems exist.” Her note suggests the work in this collection a kind of pivot, shifting her work’s trajectory in a way that makes me curious to see an eventual comparison between this and her prior collection, and the collection or collections still to come. She compares the process to one of dowsing—which by itself only occurs through one being open to receiving such broadcasts—a process not far from the late San Francisco Renaissance poet Jack Spicer’s suggestion that he was but a transistor radio for broadcasts from the “Martians.” As Chatti’s note continues:
I think of myself as having discovered these poems rather than having wrought them—I am the one who held the rod, entered the field, but I did not conjure the water already there. I feel they are cowritten: some in conversation with another (unaware) writer, others a dictation of a voice beyond my understanding—my unconscious or an external force—call it God, the Muse, I can’t say, but I know better than to claim it as mine alone. Call it divine.
The poems in “Oracle” are written as echoes or shadow sides—responses, negative images—to poems by women whose voices first led me to discover my own. Each poem in “Divine” was written while flipping very quickly, at random, through beloved books and recording words and fragments that evoked a bodily response or otherwise snared my attention, as well as my misreadings, reactions, and associative leaps. The “Night Poems” were written on the brink of sleep, on my cell phone. Often, I would doze off midway through. The final sections, “After Thought” and “Shadow/Self,” are the poems that arrived once I learned again, at last, how to move out of my mind’s way.
Might someone else be able or willing to track the distances and differences between this collection and her prior? I would hope so, given how deliberate such an opening declaration. Chatti writes of being open to receiving the words, as well as returning to the foundations of what prompted her to write in the first place; finding her ground, again. And Chatti offers an array of responses, after works by Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Lucille Clifton, Jean Valentine, Louise Glück, Linda Gregg, Alejandra Pizarnik, Gwendolyn Brooks, Adrienne Rich and C.D. Wright, citing a few of these poets more than once. Through returning to this array of poets, as she says, “women whose voices first led me to discover my own,” it seems to reinforce this consideration of the author attempting to find ground after feeling untethered. Go back to the basics, as it were, returning to those poems and those writers that provided those original reasons to begin. In the first poem “after Sylvia Plath,” the four-poem sequence “ONE WOMAN: A Poem Unvoiced,” Chatti writes:
I am wild. I am wild. It is
the wildness before something sublime.
The violet hour after the
earth stills, when the roots
Bury their tails, their
suffusion. It is so raucous, elsewhere.
The shades, the bodies,
are black and moving, like infinity.
Silence approaches and
swells. Its invisible clarity
Swells, ink opening to
let stillness in.
It erases knowledge,
languageless.
Across five sections—“ORACLE,” “DIVINE,” “NIGHT POEMS,” “AFTER THOUGHT” and “SHADOW/SELF”—these poems do seek a return to balance through and after loss and grief, the sensation of such spelled out through poems such as “GRIEF,” that opens: “Like a hawk, gyring / out of reach. / In sweet of shadow / larger than its origin.” Across deeply intimate heartbreak, Chatti writes around infertility and dreams, desire and the impossibility of hope. “Will you ever / speak to me again, beyond / my nightly resurrections? My desire / displaces, is displaced.” she writes, as part of the poem “MY SENTIMENTAL AFTERNOON,” a poem that offers this devastating closure: “It’s true: I am learning to believe / there are beautiful things / never meant for me.” Still, there are ways through which one can see this a book of optimism, working through as Chatti composes poems clawing through the dark and attempting what might lay beyond, although the collection as a whole is far more detailed, more complex, than simply that. Through connecting her grief and hope through the language of other women, other poets, Chatti works to reconnect to her very roots, reminding her of that sense of community especially required through such feelings of untethered loss. “I run under water / a fistful of blueberries,” she writes, in the poem “FOR THE BABY THAT IS NOT, IS NO LONGER, COULD ONE DAY BE,” “a kettle / I watch until it shrieks. My face, / so I can face it.” And here, the crux of the collection, perhaps: however dark this moment of grief, to be able to face it, however screaming and wild and silent; for grief to land, to process, it has to fully be, and it is, here. Or, as the poem “A WOMAN HAS TO LIVE HER LIFE” ends:
You took you from us
and two decades later I’m
on a mountain
startling at butterflies,
shivery
phantoms in the yellow
clover.
And the clouds quietly
knit over.
And I take a different
path back down.


