Katie Naughton: Two Spacewalks
spacewalk: the great American moon summer
listening to Eno’s Apollo
on the hottest run of days
in the history of records
you’re aching and closed off
in another room so I won’t
breathe your air a chrome
siren another and it’s getting
dark we stood in the vibrating summer
lot each alone in breath
and fluid to be tested
we stood together in the street
to count our breath together
some people came home
some others in the cold of space
while they became moonscape
silent and mechanical science
of technology and life
hybrid motion and ultimate nomination
call you to be so named
by the body of humanity
I mean what we call body is
operative and tells death
America who to come for
that the drawings my grandmother
pulls from the attic 1969’s idea
it read of American heroics
battles aeronautics landscape itself
not neutral the white space
of American space
who will call the color
call it deep blue day
the cold of lake water
the red of blood or berries
the white hot flash of sun
the thick dark warmth
of forest and night
and motion fast and small under
all that sky astonishing
of every growing thing
around whom that wraps
tropic whose beauty
whose death called
whose beginning
we have to make it
everyone’s moon
start calling space
black and possible
spacewalk: moon summer
what enigma of nostalgia
I mean blue morning
releasing the wood smell
from the floorboards
one could almost be born
with America on the moon
born having a new tearing
feeling to it in anticipation
I mean the air is more
than anyone can ask for
staying home outside
I keep moving in the panic
of others a regular feeling
intensified like there’s another
depth I hadn’t even known
before and some calm in having
placed it and also a dark
spreading liquid stain
calling that night
in America
*
it’s the moon summer
honestly it always is
the extravagance of heat
the village feeling
of who is home
in the afternoon
(it’s everyone)
the world ends and
we sit on the stores
the myth is superceded
by what always was
we were bodies in space
we were being born
we were alone in hot
fragrant rooms
we were what was taking
what was taken-from
Katie Naughton is the author of the poetry collection The Real Ethereal (Delete Press 2024), and the chapbooks Study (Above/Ground Press, 2021), A Second Singing (Dancing Girl Press, 2023), and Debt Ritual (forthcoming from Fonograf Editions/Bunny, 2025). Her poetry has been published in Fence, Bennington Review, Colorado Review, Michigan Quarterly Review and elsewhere. She is an editor at Essay Press, the HOW(ever) and How2 Digital Archive Project, and Etcetera, a web journal of poetry and poetics (www.etceterapoetry.com). She lives in Brooklyn, NY, and is a doctoral candidate in the Poetics program at SUNY Buffalo.