Summer and Austin Have Left Their Apartment For a House

By Romie Stott

I meant to write a poem for your wedding

about superfluids. About quantized groupings

whose singular momentum pushes up and over containers -

about transmission of heat, creation of vortices,

the creation of h/m proportions of vortices

where h is plank's constant -

a spun bucket that holds a dozen whirlpools.

I meant to write that you were aligned together

in the same quantum state,

and could not be contained. I meant to write

a poem of matter, of transition points -

of energy that transforms liquid to gas -

of boiling water at a steady temperature

as molecules leap into vapor.

They don't use the term latent heat anymore.

I can't use it to say you've changed states.

It was a long time building, only seeming

the same, like boiling water, as you transformed

into something that rises.


Romie Stott is contributing editor at cross-genre magazine Reflection's Edge. She is a professional narrative filmmaker whose work has been commissioned by the National Gallery, London, and the Dallas Museum of Art. She moonlights in experimental theater.