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Lisa Gluskin


Air Conditioner

A man came and cut a hole in the wall.
Now their room hums and purrs, exchanging
one air for another. Beside her
he turns, mumbles. Burrows in for the night.

Through the screen, the scrim,
the pulsing grid of the box, she hears the street
on the other side, impersonating
some other place. The interstate, the old
house on a lake. A train station.
The hot sad air of some other city.

The box rasps and burbles, coughs a language
line by line. Liminal,
she thinks. Agitate.
White noise. All their words
broken down and weightless, filtered
through that whirring fan.

Rhythm. Diurnal. That other summer,
sweating under a single sheet.
Turning together, silent. Two satellite towers
scanning the night.



Lisa Gluskin is a San Francisco writer and editor. Lately, she's been working real hard not to signify. You can see more of her work here.


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7.25.2000
Jasmine from newmarket, ontario

I adore it!
This has such a beautiful simplicity to it. I love poems that appear to be about a single object, but actually represnt something more. I feel that I am reading such a poem. Excellent use of imagery.



6.19.2000
sad and annoyed

you idiots
it's not just about an air conditioner. stupid stupid. geez! and "make it rhyme?" What's wrong with you?



5.09.2000
Erica Bell from Portland, Or

Great use of language.
Even though the poem is only about an air conditioner it explains more than that. The language used is wonderful Half way through the poem I started picturing a situation separate from the poem. To be able to influence thoughts like that is a great talent.







©2000 Gumball Poetry.