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Column 480

The Lath House

Intro by Ted Kooser
06.01.2014

I like the looks of trel­lis­es and arbors and those minia­ture barns that keep your bushel bas­kets of tools dry. Here’s a poem by Frank Osen, who lives in Pasade­na, about a gar­den shel­ter that’s return­ing to the earth.

The Lath House

Wood strips, cross-purposed into lattice, made
this nursery of interstices—a place
that softened, then admitted, sun with shade,
baffled the wind and rain, broke open space.
It’s now more skeletal, a ghostly room
the garden seemed to grow, in disrepair,
long empty and well past its final bloom.

Less lumbered, though, it cultivates the air
by shedding cedar slats for open sky.
As if, designed to never seem quite finished,
it had a choice to seal and stultify
or take its weather straight and undiminished,

grow larger but be less precisely here,
break with its elements, and disappear.

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Disclaimer

We do not accept unsolicited submissions

We do not accept unsolicited submissions. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright © 2013 by Frank Osen, from his most recent book of poems, Virtue, Big as Sin, Able Muse Press, 2013. Poem reprinted by permission of Frank Osen and the publisher. Introduction copyright © 2024 by The Poetry Foundation.