Read this week's winning poem, "Honeysuckle" by multiple What Light winner Cary Waterman, selected by e.g. bailey.
HONEYSUCKLE It is a funny thing when you imagine yourself returning into the past with the
  contraband of the present.
    —Nabokov
Daughter says it’s Honeysuckle. Mother says no – Columbine
  red orange earlobes
    petals on green lace Daughter says her father dead
  many years ago told her
    it was honeysuckle although now, thinking, she says maybe
  he had showed her Honeysuckle next
    to Columbine and Mother, because we forgive the dead
  almost everything, infact rewrite
    our entire history with them so that it softens like an old scab in salt water
  the fact of their death and softens
    too the fact of us still alive to see this sunlit June day
  mirror sea all around
    Mother says perhaps it is Honeysuckle
  even though she knows
    quite definitely otherwise because one memory ago
  he waded Rush Creek to pick Columbine
    the Colorado State Flower illegally for her after they had made love
  he on top with his feet in the creek
    she on the mud of mossy bank before everything else happened. Poetics This poem plays on the conflation of memory with desire. We remember what we want to remember and in the way that we want to remember it, which may change over time and experience. Our desire to believe our personal memory infallible brings conundrum after conundrum. In Greek mythology, the daughters of Mnemosyne (Memory) are the Nine Muses who inspire all poetry and art. Often forgotten (no pun intended) is Lesmosyne, the Goddess of Forgetting who sits in the shadows waiting to be called or not called. Biography Cary Waterman is the author of When I Looked Back You Were Gone (Holy Cow! Press), The Salamander Migration (University of Pittsburg), First Thaw (Minnesota Writers Publishing House), and Dark Lights the Tiger’s Tail (Scopecraft Press). She co-edited the anthology, Minnesota Writes: Poetry (Milkweed Editions). Her own poems have appeared in the anthologies, A Geography of Poets, Woman Poet:The Midwest, The Logan House Anthology of 21st Century American Poetry and Poets Against the War. She has poems forthcoming in The Blue Earth Review, The Great River Review, Cutthroat, and The Minnesota Women’s Poetry Anthology. She has spent time at the MacDowell Colony and at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre in Ireland. Her writing awards include Bush Foundation Fellowships, Minnesota State Arts Board Fellowships, and the Loft-McKnight Award of Distinction in Poetry. She teaches at Augsburg College and at Normandale Community College.


