The Saying Goes

Suphil Lee Park
| poetry

 

Our days are numbered, ask
any of us.

Our town believes in the sequence
of invention. Companions
teacups with saucers,
windows with shutters.

We ache to understand the connection
between chairs and tables—how they were
brought together.

A furnished home lit from within
as if every piece were created together.

Strung together by chance,
we’re either looking or looked for.

Suphil Lee Park (수필 리 박 / 秀筆 李 朴) is a poet, translator, and writer born and raised in South Korea. She’s the author of Present Tense Complex and a forthcoming chapbook, Still Life, and translator of If I’m Going to Live to One Hundred, I May as Well Be Happy by Rhee Kun Hoo, forthcoming from Ebury, Penguin UK.

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