poems by rachel kellum

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2019 2019

Tiny Horizons

Tiny horizons
None are forgotten, all traced
By eyeless snow storm

2019

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2019 2019

Picnic Table

Picnic table
long white cushions
a snow feast

2019

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2019 2019

Haiku Poet

Turn toward a door
Miss clump of wet snow
Slipping off lamp post


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2019 2019

Mount Challenger

Cloud drapes wide shoulders,
White scarf blown far back
In the face of Crestone Peak

2019


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2019 2019

Winter Soccer

Dreaming of being a snowman
A soccer ball draws a line
Where it rolls

2019

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2019 2019

Backing Out

Miniature mountain range of snow
parallel to ledge of carport roof
the morning’s speed bump

2019


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2019 2019

Outdoor Court

after a snow
no out of bounds
in basketball

2019

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2019 2019

Swish

last night’s snow flakes
made basket after basket

2019

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2019 2019

Middle School Pressure

Girl barometers
Passing glances like cruel notes
Predict the snow storm

2019

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2019 2019

Shedding

The antique Iraqi rug likely never knew a family dog
before ours. When I vacuum it after he leaves
for a weekend with my son, it is usually with a sense
of a few days’ relief from hair everywhere. On Sundays
when he returns, I don’t care that God’s woven trails
of geometric red and indigo turn dusty mauve
and grey with down. That is the way with dog hair.
You bear it. But today, when my son packed bags
to live with his dad two hours away and took
with him only a few of the things I gave to give him
small reasons to raise his head, I almost understood.
A mother’s love isn’t all. Her wisdom is at best, for now,
a suffered fluff. Teenage boys want only a bit of it
and something more: the clutter and berth of freedom
fathers sagely give to man-sized sons. I vacuumed
the rug what felt a final time. I did it sobbing,
drooling, with a knotted grudge. A hunch. My son
will forge his own mind. The dog will not get walked
enough; we both will fatten up. If I had had the time
and foresight to spin, I’d have saved and combed
and spun the past year’s every tuft of liver-spotted fur
to knot a musky blanket of the love that dog
has learned nuzzling my son. I’d sleep under it.

2019


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