poems by rachel kellum

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

in Puget Sound

Wince into some corner

of your mind as you walk,

dragged along

by will,

by love for your daughter

who has found winter

in the water,

found a way

to move forward

and through.

Strip down

to barely clad,

body curving

every direction over stones,

the shoreline of your skins,

your mothers’ mothers’ blood

pulsing ancient tides

against spring wind.

Walk with purpose,

you are told,

no hesitation.

Pour your toes into the Sound.

Wade into the icy cold,

into liquid salt.

Notice water crawling

your inches and forget

all the words that name

your parts.

Silence the monologue

cataloguing your discomforts.

Gather the reins

of your ragged gasps.

Gently pull into quiet breath.

Hold up your hands,

trembling supplicant,

above the surface,

like those birds on piers

spreading wings

to any thread of sun.

Open and close

your fingers like pumps,

like hearts.

Press palms together

against lips’ silent syllables.

Catch hot prayers,

animal gasps and shudders,

death’s promised rattle

not yet death.

Waves lick your clavicle.

Calm cold seeps into limbs,

follows blood and lymph

into deep caverns.

Don’t fight it.

Notice small waves’ texture.

Notice a lone seal’s distant head skim

and plunge,

surface there

now there

now gone.

Turn to your grown daughter

who brought you here,

who stares out past

the farthest horizon.

Look for it.

for Sage

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

Beckett’s Teacher Confesses

I realized today

while reading Act I,

I am not Vladimir

or Estragon. Aimless vagabonds.

I am Lucky.

Not lucky, Lucky.

The one who carries the bags

              of the rich, and the hard stool, who teaches children,

              not on purpose, to carry bags, too,

who puts down the load to dance,

              or think, when Pozzo cracks the whip,

who used to dance and think for joy

              before the QuaQuaQua

              for the A-cacaca-demy,

who now collapses, exhausted

who stands and carries on automatically

              when someone puts the handle

              of the bag in my hand,

says, Nothing to be done.

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

Modern Silence

John Cage called

silence traffic

 

more or less true

of towns and minds

 

not two a.m. a mile

outside of Crestone

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

Unwritten

Everything I do

is the day’s unwritten poem.

It takes all my daring

not to write it down.

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

Furniture of the Dead

This morning after waking, I bathed my sour hair

and dressed in cotton woven by machines. Drifted

to the living room with couches snagged and draped

with children’s old bedsheets and books: protection

for cushions from cat claws while we sleep.

 

I could be a ghost waking up months dead, wandering

the family mansion full of dusty furniture, suspended—

freeze-tagged kids in Granny’s thin whites on Halloween,

no holes for eyes. But today I am alive. Not dead.

 

I undress the couch, the chair, to live in my house,

drink tea, watch light crawl across cobwebbed walls

and leaning plants, browning bananas in a bowl.

Today I sigh to sit by this tar-stained, stained-glass lamp,

the one by which I used to read in Laurie’s basement

 

to be near her—cooly smoking. The lamp holds on like grief

to potential light, the way I do, anticipating night, when

I can pull this chain and that, ignite its double bulbs,

glowing like my friend’s clear eyes through twisting smoke.

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

My Sister’s Arm

As little girls

and teens, it was

our favorite sister trick

to trade skin,

so simple to sit

on the sofa,

open my right hand

palm-up on her lap,

her left hand open

palm-up on mine,

arms crossed

in the X of a kiss,

of a chromosome,

the tip of my left finger

perched on her wrist,

her right fingertip

perched on mine.

 

Eyes closed,

synchronized so as not

to break the spell,

we would slide

our touch slowly, slowly

toward the tender

inner elbow of the other

and back to the wrist

when it would happen:

the eerie sensation

my sister’s arm was mine,

her finger now my finger

stroking my own arm

back and forth,

until we could no longer

bear the awful squirm,

the skin-crawling

truth, that future lie:

we are one—

my arm buried with her

in the mud

when she died,

her arm here

begging for touch

as I type.

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

I Know How Old Women Love

Gramps’ teeth in a cup
on the sink of my youth: perfect toothed smile
now in my own love’s mouth

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

new teeth

 

day one a torture of red holes

plastic corset for bones, words

wobble clack, pain pupils

 

tongue quiver-searches

clamped mouth, stiff pink tourniquet

 

salivates blood anger fear

impermanence of inflammation,

tiny bones, tears

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2023 Rachel Kellum 2023 Rachel Kellum

Elegy for LVJ

When Ultra-Violet died,

her house plants,

silent green friends

for decades—

fern, heartleaf,

giant jade—died too.

 

Her kitchen radio

played classic rock

in the dark

for weeks, looking

antique but new,

seeking her ear.

 

Old cigarette ash lay

in a faceted glass tray

like faded buffalo,

like fingers mourning

the letters of her

nearby keyboard.

in memory of Laurie Violet James

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