poems by rachel kellum

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

Stalagmite

 

Dark thoughts drip

Stalactite

Finger, fang, bud

Of child’s first

Top tooth

A dark twin forms

Below

Reaches up

Fills the gap

My heart

 

God’s finger finally

Touches Eve’s

Coyote takes her first bite

Hungry infant bleeds

Mother’s breast

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

Sand Burial

Before tractors buried her father

who would have loved to watch the work

of those machines, earthmovers, like himself—

the way good men pulled levers to lift his vault lid,

suspended like a Frank Lloyd Wright cantilever

hovering over the eternal balcony of death,

that bardo where inside marries outside,

and lowered one end perfectly above him

until one lip slipped into the vault’s rim

and made the opposite end quaver

(That’s how you know male meets female,

the undertaker said with pride in his men,

artists, he called them, for knowing

the subtle arts of the trade: See, that’s when

they know the concrete seam will seal, their signal

to lower the lid the rest of the way)—

the woman with her teenage son in grandpa’s

cap, grey hairs and spiced sweat still in the band,

threw fistfuls of sand into the hole

then shovelfuls, to finally let his chronic absence go,

resurrecting now the memory of that day her father

fished small grains of sand from her red eyes

with tissue he had wadded to a point,

that tenderness, the lingering sting.

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

two pruning haiku

dusty pungent stalks

last year’s crop of Russian sage

fall to my quick blades

 * * * * *

sneeze, gather white twigs

living ten of wands woman

my burden is light

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

Fluxus Score: Instructions for a Couple Over Unknown Duration

1.

Observe his plate of tater tots

while you wait to pray.

Listen to his heavy stream across the house

the water course through pipes

his feet return, full of him. Pray.

 

2.

Sit in silent witness

of creosote collecting

on the wood stove pane.

Take turns placing your palm

on each other’s thigh.

 

3.

Nearly halfway

through duration

begin cold plunging.

Gasp together until

a calm carries.

 

3.

Giggle and kiss each other once again

just to upset the whimpering dog

who wants a kiss goodbye, too

every morning, not jealous of him

but you who gets his first kiss.

 

4.

Each of you, nearly alternately

lay a log on the fire when coals begin

to die, open the flue until flames rise.

Keep each other warm like this

until your last winter.

 

5.

Notice when the other

makes the bed, sweeps

cooks, waters seeds

takes out trash.

Say something.

 

6.

Moan into each other’s ears.

 

7.

Walk the short loop,

the mid loop, the long loop

for as long as the dog lives.

Notice together or alone

the walk takes you home.

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

tumbling

we have                 tumbled

around          each other

           so long                   we are             smoothed

by                  the other's                grit

more                      and                               more

                                          translucent

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

Lines Before Dawn

When the house is no longer simply a place where I wake

to get ready for work, a launch pad to a school—

and instead, by leisure, has become a dark sky twinkling

constellations of sleeping machines, bright clusters

of red, white, green and blue lights, and I have wandered

into my youngest grown son’s room to find a black hole

where no light switches or charging phones glow—it is time

to step out onto the peeling deck with my forgotten feet,

thin socked, my mother’s silent, soft blanket wrapped around me.

No swishing materials of my body to steal peace, I look up.

Deep space offers its trail of ancient smoke and tiny stars.

Planets I can’t name are aligned, planets I learned earlier online.

There they are. Two meteors draw their lines across the night

like a sweet girl drawing then erasing her marks.

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

Size 14 Secret Security

Her love has left his giant boots

in the foyer

for as long as she’s known him.

 

Clutter, she always thought,

another thing to put in order

until the day he told her

 

he leaves them where

the window in the door

affords a view to a warning.

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

Nasturtiums 

Even wrathful beings start out small—

in this case, like tiny, dehydrated testes,

white and wrinkled, promising

protection despite your lack

of faith. You can’t believe it

when green coins form, shallow bowls

for single rain drops. Such pools

foretell pestilence—the crystal balls

of lady bugs and praying mantises

hunkered down in wait, watching

blood red, orange and yellow

blooms unfold themselves like warm

aureoles, ladies’ fans, lips laced

with pepper—so festive, so sharp

on a salad, a human tongue, so repugnant

to aphids and flies they’ll take

their colonizing fleet elsewhere,

to your naïve neighbors’ garden,

buzzing their national anthem all the way.

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2024 Rachel Kellum 2024 Rachel Kellum

Spring Beauties

Look, Momma, sping booties, sping booties!

~Sage Magdelene, age 3

It is not Groundhog Day exactly.

There are major mistakes to right. I cannot.

 

No endless re-tries or deadening repetitions.

No escape. It is just these seven small rooms,

 

full of the dust and scent of living—coffee,

salty sheets, cut pine, March dog, wood smoke.

 

It is these sandy trails where daily I greet

my own shoe tread of yesterday,

 

notice my gait, step off-register, new.

It is the real smile in my love’s morning eyes,

 

that softness he reserves for me, my hands.

It is my body remembering three toddlers’

 

heft in night dreams, that sweet grief.

It is the checking of screens for evidence

 

of their fractal lives spinning presence

off of me, our curving Mandelbrot set

 

of mothers, my first grandchild sprouting.

It is the digital taking-in of their encounters

 

with simple, complicated, horrible beauty,

that glimpse of what they do, now grown,

 

with epigenetic inheritance, that best thing

I had to give. Look, I would say. Look.

 

This little pink flower, this bliss, this thick sadness,

this roaring rage, let’s look at it together,

 

squat before it pink and green on solid feet,

shake songs from chromosomal chains and winter.

 

Let’s sigh, touch the fragile petals.

They won’t stay long. Look, there they go.

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