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Something Quiet

Something Quiet

by Rosalie Moffett

My mothers dog is buried under a railroad tie
in the garden
because if theres not something heavy

there, something quiet
will come and dig it up. My dog was cremated
because I wanted to bury him

but where in my rented city yard
could I? I hope you know
Im donating my body to science. Im about as far

as I can go and be
in the same country as my mother,
who is almost at the end

of the winding highway connecting the town
to nowhere:
a hollowed canyon and its black cows, its river

enameled with whatever
light the time of day is making. As soon as I held
the dogs expensive ashes,

I knew it was an absurd question,
where hed want to be
scatteredcouldnt walk myself

through his dog-logic,
his trying to grasp what it mattered what I did
with his body when he was

no longer in it. Who knows what, then,
theyll learn about me,
what a specimen Ill be. The country is vast.

I left home, drove away
towing a U-Haul. The world is full
of beauty, is enormous.

It doesnt make a bit of difference
where I put any
of the ones Ive loved.


In my family, when one of us reached the lonely and miserable patch of adolescence, we were prescribed a dog. I got a border collie. Initially, the dog was there for me when I was being intolerable, when the world was being intolerable, but, among other things, the dog served as training wheels for loving and prioritizing something other than myself. And then, later, I had to learn how to care for him as he grew old and infirm, had to learn to cope with his loss. Part of my grief in his last year was knowing that this was also a kind of training wheels. Something Quiet came out of grappling with that lesson.


is the author of Nervous System, winner of the NationalPoetry Series, chosen by Monica Youn, forthcoming from Ecco press. She is alsothe author of June in Eden, winner of the Ohio State University Press/The Journalprize. She has been awarded the Discovery/Boston Review prize, a WallaceStegner fellowship in creative writing from Stanford University, and scholarshipsfrom the Tin House and Bread Loaf writing workshops. Moffetts poems andessays have appeared in Tin House, The Believer, FIELD, Narrative, The KenyonReview, AGNI, Ploughshares, and other magazines, as well as in the anthologyGathered: Contemporary Quaker Poets.

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