This month's Moon Prize, the sixty-eighth, goes to Sophia Stid's poem "Daphne Pursued by
Apollo."
DAPHNE
PURSUED BY APOLLO
by Sophia Stid
A story told this many times becomes the forest.
No beginning, no end, no longer a narrative but the
air
we breathe. For centuries, a woman with a name
rises from her sleep—becomes a tree—rains back down
again into her rest. One myth for how poetry began:
a man, reaching. Violence. Myth: Apollo finds the
tree
inside of a woman. Apollo translates fingers into
leaves,
hears a voice and calls it wind. I am not interested
in Apollo.
I am interested in the father-god
who could not stop
the rape but could turn his daughter into a tree—
what kind of power is that, and how does
it still river through
our world? Why does nobody ask these questions? I
carry more
keys than I need. Walking home from the library late, I thread
silver teeth through my fist. I am not a tree, and I
am asking.
* * * * *
"Daphne Pursued by Apollo" was first
published in Four
Way Review and
was also featured in Poetry
Daily (December
6, 2020).
Sophia Stid is a writer
from California. She is the Ecotone Postgraduate
Fellow at UNC Wilmington and a recent graduate of the MFA program at Vanderbilt
University, where she studied poetry and theology. She has received fellowships
from the Bucknell Seminar for Younger Poets, Sewanee Writers’ Conference, and the Collegeville Institute, and is the
winner of the 2019 Witness Literary Award in Poetry. Recent poems and essays
can be found in Best New
Poets 2020, Image, The Cincinnati Review, Rattle,
and Pleiades,
among others.
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