Vol. 6 No. 4

Spring 2024

Bag
Editor's Note
Anniversary
Borrowed Dream
At Dan's Wake
Birdhouse
I Bring You Home
Flicker
For All the Ways We Do Not Touch
Pigeon Slay
Ode to Orange
A Three-Legged Dog on a Christmas Card
The Boat
The Tree Guy
Pigeon Face
It’s Winter Now, The Fish is Dead
Apples
Piñata Nights
About as Close as My Husband’s Ever Going to Get to a Love Poem
Birdhouse in Light
Familiar
Holding On
White Dragon
Cough
Pearl
I Wake Up to My Dog Gnawing
The water at Camp Lejeune
Princess and Stars
Boyhood
Pathophysiology
I Dreamed Us in A Rocketship
Bird
Duplex
i dreamt i gave birth to the opossum in my backyard
What Comes To Hand
Dream-Inducing Dragon
Red Circles
Río Paraná
The Launch We Carry
Two Dragons
Butterflies
A Teaspoon of Soil
Plum Rain
No Pity for My Scorched Lips
Her therapist told her to write her dead father a letter
Scissoring
A Request of My Lips
You Will Find No Place Like Your Heart
Names of Black Birds (IV)
Post Mortem
Duh
Chanting Kaddish for My Estranged Father
Her Chickens
Living is a form of not being sure*
Cavalier Sally
My Best Friend in Kindergarten
Olenka
Hosed
Velma and Willie
Code-Switching, a sonnet
Lately, certain months decline their customary duty
Jack O’Lantern
NuNu's Dream
this is not the thrill i was promised
WHAT HAPPENED WHEN THEY RETURNED TO THE HOUSE AFTER THE WAR
The Anorexic Conservationist
Opaque Red Crystal Oxidized
When I enter a place where I am to stay
A Premonition While Looking at ‘Ambulance Call’ by Jacob Lawrence
Best Wishes for the Expectant Mother

Editor’s Note

Dear Readers,

It is spring again, and the world is making itself new. In New England, the snow is starting to melt, the days are getting longer once more. The birds at the feeder have turned from cardinals to nuthatches. The world is turning in that great cycle.

It feels fitting that this issue of Thimble is particularly ripe with animals. We have dog poems, bird stories, fish poems, and bird pictures. We have butterflies, blackbirds, and chickens and hope—that other winged creature.

And yet all is not rosey. You might say that this is not the thrill we were promised. Underneath all the fecundity is death, gnawing at the roots.

I was watching “The Last of Us” over Christmas break, and one scene that struck me is when a pastor explains to a little girl that they must wait until the ground thaws to bury her father.

Spring is the time of life, yes, but more so tending. Tending garden, house, the dead.

In “The Last of Us,” of course, death and life get jumbled in unholy ways, because, well, zombies. What a catastrophe.

I don’t know where this is going, but I’m shambling on. I’m making damn good time.

I hope the animals come back. I hope the blackbirds are singing in the dead of night. I hope the opossums’ eyes shine brightly yellow in your backyard. I hope the pianos keep in tune. They will if we tend them.

Thank you for cultivating a greener world in the country of the imagination.

Best,
Nadia Arioli

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