Quote by: Robert Hass

But usually not. Usually she thinks of the path to his house, whether deer had eaten the tops of the fiddleheads, why they don't eat the peppermint saprophytes sprouting along the creek; or she visualizes the approach to the cabin, its large windows, the fuchsias in front of it where Anna's hummingbirds always hover with dirty green plumage and jeweled throats. Sometimes she thinks about her dream, the one in which her mother wakes up with no hands. The cabin smells of oil paint, but also of pine. The painter's touch is sexual and not sexual, as she herself is....When the memory of that time came to her, it was touched by strangeness because it formed no pattern with the other events in her life. It lay in her memory like one piece of broken tile, salmon-coloured or the deep green of wet leaves, beautiful in itself but unusable in the design she was making


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Author Bio


  • NameRobert Hass
  • DescriptionAmerican poet
  • AliasesRobert L. Hass
  • BornMarch 1, 1941
  • CountryUnited States Of America
  • ProfessionPoet
  • AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship; MacArthur Fellows Program; Pulitzer Prize For Poetry; National Book Award