Close Talking: A Poetry Podcast

Episode #070 Child Holding Potato - Rick Barot

05.24.2019 - By Cardboard Box Productions, Inc.Play

Download our free app to listen on your phone

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Connor and Jack discuss the poignant, quiet poem "Child Holding Potato" by Rick Barot. They consider, in Barot's own words, the "limits of art to console," time's relentless march, and the power of stressed syllables. Jack may or may not muse about the one and only Bruce, and Connor may or may not rant about the state of iambic pentameter education.

Learn more about Barot, here: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/rick-barot

Check out Barot's latest book here: http://www.sarabandebooks.org/all-titles/chord-rick-barot

Find us on Facebook at: facebook.com/closetalking


Find us on Twitter at: twitter.com/closetalking


Find us on Instagram: @closetalkingpoetry

You can always send us an e-mail with thoughts on this or any of our previous podcasts, as well as suggestions for future shows, at [email protected].

Child Holding Potato

By: Rick Barot

When my sister got her diagnosis,

I bought an airplane ticket

but to another city, where I stared

at paintings that seemed victorious

in their relation to time.

The beech from two hundred years ago,

its trunk a palette of mud

and gilt. The man with olive-black

gloves, the sky behind him

a glacier of blue light. In their calm

landscapes, the saints. Still dripping

the garden’s dew, the bouquets.

Holding the rough gold orb

of a potato, the Child cradled

by the glowing Madonna. Then,

the paintings I looked at the longest:

the bowls of plums and peaches,

the lemons, the pomegranates

like red earths. In my mouth,

the raw starch. In my mouth, the dirt.

More episodes from Close Talking: A Poetry Podcast