
There’s a cleanly spoken, elegant poem in Poetry, May 2025, that lingers in the mind’s eye. It’s called “Infinity Pool” by Vona Groarke.
You flirt with an arresting occurrence in the liminal paralysis of semi-sleep. It nags. If not worded somehow, in your fully woken state it will have flown the coop. In Vona Groarke’s voice:
I had it in the night, the image,
but lacked the energy or will
to magic my body through
my own fourth wall and lower
myself, spit-spot, into the page.
Memory makes a stab, furrowing its brow. A visual conceit verges on recollection at a “just about” level of evanescence, like the lacery in foam etched on sand by a beached roller.
But I saw, I just about recall,
a blue rectangle not quite blank
held up against blue sky, blue sea
so you weren’t supposed to tell
the edge, the stitching, or the seams.
Say, a collage! The vision has coalesced into color, shape, backdrop: blue, primary hue that confines itself to distances; a shape with sides and corners, perceptibly edgeless; sky, sea.
“Infinity pool” is what it is — a luxuriant spa fixture, feat of engineered tomfoolery, extrapolated to an origami-like reminder pocketed for cherishing. I was stranded in the metaphysical until I caught the drift.
And I am folding it now, this pool,
corner to corner, line to line,
so as to carry about with me
its deep blue scrap of lie.
Artfully deflating, conclusive irony:
But carrying folded water
isn’t feasible. You know that.
Who’s “you”? Me? The poem talking to itself? The abrupt interpolation teases. What makes us human is eked out on scraps of lie, on our “knowing” the unreasonable — the ever-loving “hidden” and its haunted relatives. We carry water for our illusions. We feed them hermeneutically. They float somewhere beyond feasible, retrievable in our confabulations. I can’t say enough about “Infinity Pool” by Vona Groarke, or anything really. It’s damn near perfect.
(c) 2025 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved
Lovely! The image of a folded infinity pool is very enticing. Your painting is a perfect complement to the poem, Jim.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you, Sue. I appreciate the kind words!
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is a mind bender. And the bending starts with the poet’s name.
And then – it unbends …
Or begins to.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I agree the name is an original, Josie.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I love the painting. That lovely custard cream shape. I wasn’t sure if it was your painting (Milton Avery?), then I recognised the paints.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Thank you for the comment, OA. I do indeed like Milton Avery’s work, pleased you see some relation to it.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Where is the painting of, a particular place?
LikeLiked by 2 people
No particular place, just done from a generic shot of an infinity pool. I had to jog my memory that these things existed and were called that!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Oh onteresting, I saw it as a field with a dirt edge
LikeLiked by 2 people
Hah! I’m glad it lends itself to interpretation. Thank you, OA!
LikeLiked by 1 person