Winter 2017 - Cell
It will have been the next day that I can tell rain
yesterday. Save that enduring force of your face
behind my eyes, outward-looking. This wills me,
as the old woman spilling her groceries wills me,
as dusted, caked, erased, pushing trails through—
as the big sun over the bigger farm house waits.
When arid or when a razed plain, I do not eat,
save the fruit that reminds me of home. Then,
porch swelling like the fully outfitted house fly,
I will have been yesterday’s woman, and rain.
Spring 2016
it is fifty-fifty that she
ever gets it back. in
the gold room, the plaques
were all late for us, leafy
once, now fifty-plus
years overdue. had we
vaulted ourselves from the room, it
might have thinned, anxious
at the prospect of turn, of
crawl, of smoothing
that inability to burn. she
pulls her tendons tight for
the grass in these ways,
knowing only glare and, twice,
reflection. legs are
sectioned, heaving under wrap. shoulders
flake away in passing and
are gutted in the lap.
