"Girl on Swing" (oil on canvas, 1996) by Ruth Addinall |
A childhood memory, memorialized in this Shakespearean sonnet, its title reflects several definitions of the word resonance, for example, the ability to evoke or suggest images, memories, and emotions, as well as resonance in physics, which refers to a wide class of phenomena that arise as a result of matching temporal or spatial periods of oscillatory objects.
You can hear me read it HERE.
Resonance
Swinging is self-limiting: you can’t go past the horizontal in front or in back.
— Dr. Stephen A. Lawrence, Insights into Physics
The government delivered processed cheese.
The Philadelphia cousins sent old clothes.
I sucked my thumb, inventing destinies.
Still years away, Mom’s Tropicana rose.
I found some comfort on our backyard swing,
pumping and chanting into the arc’s peaked crest
where angular momentum let me fling
toward light-spangled leaves.
It was the best
of amplitudes—this go-for-broke reprieve
from gravity—because I knew she’d fret
me down from all I knew of bliss. Naïve
to think I’d charmed my father home, I let
go, flying from the damping pendulum,
which soon regained its equilibrium.
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