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Robert Cording: Broken

The latch on the kitchen cabinet.

At least a half-dozen day lilies
after last night’s storm.

The leaning grey birch above the garden
that cracked and went down as my wife and I ran off.

And there’s my ankle,
which, even with surgery, never healed
after I tore a ligament from the bone.

And my too short left leg, a spiral fracture
that broke both shin bones clean through
the skin in eighth grade.

Now, my brother’s fifty-year marriage
broken off as if their past was
an imposter that had been discovered.

And my best friend’s wife can’t find
the name for husband,
though he sits next to her.

Just moments ago, a favorite mug
I bought in Cornwall and used for forty years
shattered. I’m on the floor listening

to the past speaking in the clatter
of broom, metal dustpan,
and tumbled pottery pieces

that have fallen under
an old pine chest where we’d arranged
a little clay church, a candle,

and a photograph
to keep our dead son near.

The past is telling its one story
about what comes and goes,
but in no order, a stuttering sequence

of unsolvable riddles. I’m moaning
and laughing at myself down here

on the floor,
enacting the old cliché once again
of picking up the pieces.

Photo source: Energy Matters

~~~~~

Robert Cording is professor emeritus at College of the Holy Cross where he taught for 38 years and served as the Barrett Chair of English and Creative Writing.  After his retirement, he worked for five years as a poetry mentor in the Seattle Pacific University low residency MFA program. His many books include Heavy Grace (Alice James, 2022) and In the Unwalled City (Slant, 2022).

Poem copyright 2025 Robert Cording


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23 comments on “Robert Cording: Broken

  1. Lisa Zimmerman
    May 26, 2025
    Lisa Zimmerman's avatar

    “The past is telling its one story
    about what comes and goes”–

    Lovely, poignant poem.

    Like

  2. janfalls
    May 26, 2025
    janfalls's avatar

    This wondrous poem reminds me of the Buddhist teaching on impermanence that the glass is already broken, something I try to remember when my favourite cup or bowl inevitably breaks. Now I can reread Robert’s poem as I’m picking up the pieces.

    Like

  3. Robert Cording
    May 25, 2025
    Robert Cording's avatar

    Thanks everyone for taking the time to write. I am always quite moved by people’s considered and gracious comments.

    Bob

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Sean Sexton
    May 25, 2025
    Sean Sexton's avatar

    Here is one of those poetic voices received and seasoned in whole life you ever so rarely come into contact with. I have almost finished “In the Unwalled City,” and come to realize who this Robert Cording is and what he has to make of his time and place in this world. Don’t let yourself miss a further minute of this poet if like me he has come late into your life.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Vox Populi
      May 25, 2025
      Vox Populi's avatar

      Yes

      >

      Like

    • Sean Sexton
      May 25, 2025
      Sean Sexton's avatar

      I wish to correct my last sentence to say (lest there be any confusion) —“if like mine, he has come late into your life…”

      Thankyou

      Liked by 1 person

  5. boehmrosemary
    May 25, 2025
    boehmrosemary's avatar

    That ‘stuttering sequence’ makes poems grow. A wonderful poem where I felt at home.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Vox Populi
      May 25, 2025
      Vox Populi's avatar

      Bob’s voice feels so authentic, it’s like one of my brothers speaking to me.

      >

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Barbara Huntington
    May 25, 2025
    Barbara Huntington's avatar

    In my front yard, not quite under, but beside the bird feeders is my bone yard—remains of treasured cups like the blue pottery shards of the one from Macy’s Coffee House in Flagstaff that my toddler grandson, now a teen, dropped as he admired it when we still had Christmas at my house. And more recently, pieces of the tiny signed Native American pot, memory of a trip to my beloved New Mexico, that crashed when I opened the china cabinet to extract the red clay teabag holder. I sit with Tashi on her broken stuffed chair, covered with a blanket, to stare for hours at the finches, hummingbirds , wrens, the rabbits and squirrels that come to the feeders and birdbath among the manzanita, white and purple sage, Baja Fairy Duster. I’m still in bed after reading today’s poem on my phone. Damn I love Vox Populi! Now I will get up and start my breakfast if I am not waylaid by a soft old pup on a broken chair

    Liked by 3 people

    • jmnewsome93c0e5f9cd
      May 25, 2025
      jmnewsome93c0e5f9cd's avatar

      Robert Cording’s poem here has inspired you to write lyrically. It’s a gift of his to prompt your response, isn’t it? And then you pass on your own gift to us through your lively description. Life offers much in its cornucopia of numinous moments. Thanks for a glimpse of some of them. I treasure both yours, and those Cording offers as his breaking news. And the blossoms others post here. love between the lines.

      Liked by 2 people

    • Vox Populi
      May 25, 2025
      Vox Populi's avatar

      What a beautiful paragraph, Barb. Thank you!

      >

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Meg Kearney
    May 25, 2025
    Meg Kearney's avatar

    Such a beautiful and wise poem by Bob Cording. I especially adore “The past is telling its one story 
    about what comes and goes, 
    but in no order, a stuttering sequence 

    of unsolvable riddles.”

    And the ending literally gave me goosebumps!

    Liked by 3 people

  8. donnahilbert
    May 25, 2025
    donnahilbert's avatar

    Painful, powerful, perfect.

    Liked by 4 people

  9. jmnewsome93c0e5f9cd
    May 25, 2025
    jmnewsome93c0e5f9cd's avatar

    Broken, and eventually bewildered at our own limits of understanding– Yet we send forth our stories to shore up life. A little clay church, a candle, and a photograph/to keep our dead son near.

    Robert, is that the church of the trickster god? Robert Cording always brings spirituality into my reading. As I immerse in his details, I rise, saddened but lit by his language and journey; he shows me his attentiveness to the reality of the world, even as the broom rakes, the shards clatter, the mystery at the back of the kitchen cabinet awaits its fate.

    Liked by 3 people

  10. duggo1
    May 25, 2025
    duggo1's avatar

    Fine poem, and the opening strategy so smart.

    Liked by 2 people

  11. magicalphantom09a87621ce
    May 25, 2025
    magicalphantom09a87621ce's avatar

    One of the nation’s best snd most humane poets, is Bob Cording!Sent from my iPhone

    Liked by 3 people

  12. ncanin
    May 25, 2025
    ncanin's avatar

    So painful and powerful – The past is telling its one story
    about what comes and goes,
    but in no order, a stuttering sequence…

    Thank you for posting this Michael!

    Liked by 3 people

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This entry was posted on May 25, 2025 by in Health and Nutrition, Opinion Leaders, Poetry and tagged , , , , , , , .

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