The Academy of American Poets
Home | View Cart | Log In 
Subscribe | More Info 
Find a Poet or Poem
Advanced Search >
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tina Cane
Tina Cane

Tina Cane was born and raised in New York city. She completed her Masters degree in French Literature at the University of Paris X-Nanterre and has taught French, English and Creative Writing. Her poems can be found in journals including Salt Hill, Hanging Loose, Barrow Street, and Spinning Jenny. Prose poems in French appear in the anthology Laisse de Mer (Francoforum, 1999). Tina's book-length poem, Law of Fives, was a finalist for the National Poetry Series first book award and, most recently, for Fence's Alberta prize.

FURTHER READING
Poems by Tina Cane
Reality Series
Some Kinds of Fire
Essays by Tina Cane
The Raw and the Cooked: Robert Lowell and the Beats
Poems About the Natural World
Birches
by Robert Frost
Crossings
by Ravi Shankar
February: The Boy Breughel
by Norman Dubie
Four Poems for Robin
by Gary Snyder
God's World
by Edna St. Vincent Millay
In Michael Robins’s class minus one
by Bob Hicok
maggie and milly and molly and may
by E. E. Cummings
Naskeag
by Alfred Corn
October (section I)
by Louise Glück
Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood
by William Wordsworth
Of Many Worlds in This World
by Margaret Cavendish
Pastoral
by Jennifer Chang
Russian Birch
by Nathaniel Bellows
Song of Nature
by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Spontaneous Me
by Walt Whitman
The Darkling Thrush
by Thomas Hardy
The Leaves
by Deborah Digges
The River-Merchant's Wife: A Letter
by Ezra Pound
Traveling through the Dark
by William Stafford
Trees
by Joyce Kilmer
Two Butterflies went out at Noon— (533)
by Emily Dickinson
Spring
A Blessing
by James Wright
Another Attempt at Rescue
by M. L. Smoker
Birds Again
by Jim Harrison
Black Petal
by Li-Young Lee
City That Does Not Sleep
by Federico García Lorca
Diary [Surface]
by Rachel Zucker
Equinox
by Joy Harjo
From you have I been absent in the spring... (Sonnet 98)
by William Shakespeare
If a Wilderness
by Carl Phillips
In cold spring air
by Reginald Gibbons
In the Memphis Airport
by Timothy Steele
Morning News
by Marilyn Hacker
National Poetry Month
by Elaine Equi
Prologue of the Earthly Paradise
by William Morris
Spring and All
by William Carlos Williams
Spring is like a perhaps hand
by E. E. Cummings
Spring Snow
by Arthur Sze
Springing
by Marie Ponsot
Adopt a Poet | Add to Notebook | E-mail to Friend | Print
Butterfly Catcher  
by Tina Cane

In the Sixties
Nabokov switched

from ink to eraser-
topped pencil

on index cards  a box
of cards for Ada  a box

of cards for dreams
whose "curious features"

include "erotic tenderness
and heart-rending enchantment"

in one draft
he traded "stillness and heat"

for "silence, a burning"
                       so picture:

Vladimir seated
at the trunk of a tree

a spring day
at Wellesley  where

he marvels at his students
and their cable-knit socks

the way each elastic
grips without binding

just below
the knee      so exquisite

an application of pressure
that when said sock

is slowly
peeled off

the skin shows
no trace at all



Copyright © 1994 Tina Cane. Used with permission.
Larger TypeLarger Type | Home | Help | Contact Us | Privacy Policy Copyright © 1997 - 2008 by The Academy of American Poets.