poems by rachel kellum
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We never became a solution
I tried.
At the bottom,
looking up through
liquid you.
At times,
with shaking
I would float,
glowing,
glinting light in you.
You held me.
You tried.
But I
always settled,
slave
to chemistry.
Beltane: A Birthday, A Bear, A Binding
My skin gathers in a film around the quartz, mica and bones
of this land that sit like mothers on our window sills, on this longer
day than yesterday, when I turned twenty-nine on the twenty-ninth.
The night before my birthday, our beer bottles and sticky cans
were scattered, bird feeders knocked down, scarred lids
and buckets of seed emptied, peppered down the terraces of this hill.
A bear, lumbering beneath and up the ponderosa where I have hung
and knelt with you to birthe our boy, reached for feeders, spilt them
over sage. There is not a seed left on the ground where she licked.
And tomorrow, we will sit beneath the broken bough,
on licked ground imagining her hungry tongue,
halfway between spring and summer, smoking
a cherrywood pipe, cutting our hair with a hunting knife,
braiding our locks into threads of red, yellow, white and each other,
tying off the end with black, where death is. There will be grey hairs,
and blond, from you, henna from me, and somehow they will wind,
fingers reaching over fingers, and under, into each other, this love
medicine, this charm for two for whom these twisting hairs sing.
Year after year, we will make a longer, thinner braid,
leaving bald patches hidden in our hair, already growing
to replace what was lost in our joining.
A Dear Jane to the Colorado Mountains
You are the bait.
Everyone loves you.
Everyone stares
at your breasts
when they speak. You
don’t blush or say
“I’m up here,” pointing
at your eyes. Instead,
as soon as we’re in sight,
you take hold of bellies,
pull the thread and yank!
We lose our breath,
wanting only you.
Demanding, insatiable,
expensive lover…
Jealous, I’ve loved you blue.
But your plain, flat-
chested sister is a tender
lover too. Not easy, granted.
Not you. People look
right past her
even at her best
but her heart of corn is true.
Her needs are simple:
Just stay. I do.
She sends me owls, asking,
Who are you, who, who?
And I am shocked,
Someone new.
And if she could, just today, she would say:
Let us not be joined by dreams of a shared house
Or endless days of children screaming.
Must there be this mundane quantity?
Let us meet, and meet, and meet, here.
Beyond stained kitchen sinks,
Beyond shared impending poverty,
Beyond my socks tumbling with yours
In an eternal laundry.
Let’s bare our feet
And run between
These domesticities.
Here is just as sweet.
Waking up on my 39th birthday
Yellow white light, unknown birds,
first sight, first sound, first
day of my fortieth year.
Somehow, my boys also woke
naturally , sparing me the normal
morning routine, the horrible beep, beep, beep.
Happy birthday, Mama, from the fifteen year old
girl I never see. Happy birthday, Mom, from the small boy, seven,
sockless, descending stairs, otherwise fully dressed.
Happy birthday, Mommy, from the big boy, ten,
with a kiss. And O! the small boy announced,
It is Poem in Your Pocket Day! I am shocked.
After four decades, this much bliss!
We found and pocketed four poems,
walked four ways into morning, into this.
She has fallen out of love
When he felt the cloud kiss his cheek
that morning at the pond, and the boys
wouldn’t hush, and it didn’t matter
as he cast and cast around his fly,
flying mobius band of glinting light,
he didn’t know his wife would cry
in bed that night: she feels caught.
He would carefully listen
and carefully respond
as eleven years have taught.
She would hold her forehead
with her palm in the dark.
She would tell him all the muddy
catfish snags of her love,
all but the one that would snap
the line, rip the hook from her heart.
Reluctant Sonnet While Drinking Microbrewed Beer in Boulder
My mouth has been a cobwebbed house for
days. This limping heart: iambic, pacing
halls of broken words, then quickly racing
to thesaurus’ closed red doors.
I’ve never felt so linguistically poor,
searching pockets bare so I may sing
of scribbled on receipts that may ring
true, not leave me searching more.
It’s this damn Petrarchan sonnet!
Snotty tyrant dictating my rebel day
into perfect stanzas, rhythm, rhyme.
Only brew has helped me force the form upon it.
Screw this puzzle! I’ve got more to say
than can be squeezed into this fourteenth line.
Weeping Fig
Spiraled
Ficus Benjamina,
I imagine your roots
A fisted knot, pushing
Against walls of ornate
Pot, unable to outgrow it, unable
To live outdoors. Still, you push
Out leaves on dying twigs,
Drop them, crispened
Handkerchiefs.
Meditation on white until the waiter dropped a saucy fork
I never wear white or when I
do, it is with vigilant
suspicion of small
hands smeared
with jelly, paint or random
child-loved condiments.
I erased white
from my wardrobe
when I gave birth.
Nearly fifteen years
of colored clothing and
lately, mostly brown
and black. Why?
What turn has brought
me down
to muted hue,
or hue’s lack?
But today—divorce,
fathers far away,
three children gone
for days—has brought me
white! All day in white!
Woven light
cool cotton blouse,
buttoned bright summer, sheer
over flesh and self-conscious
underthings. White
as baptism for the living
and dead, white as a virgin’s wedding
gown, white as a sadhu’s ash-
smeared head. O! The righteousness
of white! The innocence! I feel
reborn! Until
now: two
hours from midnight,
my short shoulder sleeve splashed
red. Red! My mother always
said it was my true
color.