In a stunning cycle of persona poems, Daneen Wardrop offers us a
panoramic view of the inner lives of those forgotten among the violence
and strife of the American Civil War: the nurse and the woman soldier,
the child and the draftee, the prostitute, the black slave, and the
Native American soldier. Each one speaks out to be seen and heard,
bearing witness to the mundanity of suffering experienced by those whose
presence was ubiquitous yet erased in the official histories of the War
Between the States. Cyclorama takes its name from the theater-sized,
in-the-round oil paintings popular in the late nineteenth century, and
with each poem, Wardrop adds a panel to her expansive, engrossing
portrait of the bloodshed and tears, the tedium and fear experienced by
the Civil War living and the dying. With pathos and lyric force, she
brings sharply into focus perspectives on an unfathomable experience we
thought we already knew and understood.
from Women's Sanitary Corps
Sister, I link arms with you
as we enter this log-steepled tent,
white on the outside,
but on the inside the deep maroon
of thick-spackled, internal things.
How can it be
so simple here? Bed,
man-- bed, man--
where the pain leaves
no room for anything else.
My mouth is dry.
No, stay with me,
these sheet-smoothed
boys need us
with their nocturnal eyes,
not predatory but grieving,
as good animals the body,
not ready, not able to be ready.
La, where did they put
their good body?