poems by rachel kellum
to comment ✒️ click on a title
Knee Deep in the Water Somewhere
For Brittany
When your husband has gently
requested a break from the constant stream
of Jimmy Buffet, and you’ve finally
given away all the flamingo flotsam
your family thought you loved—you,
whom they mistook for a beautiful, pink,
strange bird, balanced on one foot
in the front yard of their lives—
and your new, somehow oldest friend,
on a scorching alpine desert trail
that burns beloved dogs’ feet, assures you
after hearing the longing in your voice
for cool sand, your heartsick song for the sea,
that, yes, yes, you must go, go to the beach—
well, then, you must go. Go where the body
wants to go. You cannot lie to the body.
And while her heart breaks to send you out
of this quiet, dark sky valley, with its cacti
and sand dunes, its desperate children
in whom you believed, its blood-red string
of sunset mountains, she knows this place
is not your home, this crusted graveyard
of a once inland sea. “Fly off, sweet friend,”
her heart thrills. “Though, you are no bird.
No net ensnares you. You are a free
human being with an independent will.”
with thanks to Jane Eyre, our first book, for the final lines
A Party of Pinyon Jays
I wake to dozens of dusty blue pinyon jays laughing nasally
at the feeder hanging on the piñon outside our bedroom window.
They decimate the suet brick in minutes—neither they nor I know
they are going extinct—peck with great lust, share the small feast.
Two orange headed, yellow breasted, black winged western tanagers
hang back, do without—neither they nor I know they are abundant—
lick remaining grease from the empty basket when the jays go.
I notice I prefer their sunny timidity to the greedy racket of blue.
On a nearby limb, a magpie watches me mount the stool. Takes off
to tell its mate. I refill the basket. Wait. Each bird plans a coup.
Muted tanager approaches the feed. Giant magpie drops. She flees.
I clap. All clear till her return. She nibbles. Flits off. Nuthatch takes a turn.
Late morning, a single jay discovers the suet full again. Scout perched
on a tall piñon, he chortles and cries across miles of chaparral.
Come! Come! Come! Come! Come! Come! Come! Come! They do.
A recent report on the threatened status of pinyon jays:
“Defenders of Wildlife Seeks Endangered Status for Pinyon Jay,” Albuquerque, NM, April 26, 2022
The Last Cut in Our Limited Series
A shared glance of joie de vivre
then turning back to what we do:
the book, the broom, the pen, the seed,
the plate, the drill, the trail, the moon,
the sprout, the dog, the tune, the leaf,
the pill, the wash, the snow, the croon,
the call, the pan, the sigh, the cream,
the tea, the cloud, the deer, the room,
the egg, the wine, the bill, the screen,
the sink, the child, the road, the bloom,
the grill, the pine, the hen, the weed,
the wood, the soil, the hand, the shoe,
the fire, the nap, the cat, the creek,
the bowl, the knife, the rib, the coop,
the prayer, the salt, the dome, the peak,
the leg, the rhyme, the fish, the tooth,
the smoke, the time, the rain, the sleep,
adieu, adieu, adieu, adieu.
Past Fifty
Who knew I would feel
young? Except in
my bones, poor posture,
parched mornings
after nights of bottles
with mountain poets,
patio music, chosen brothers,
liberated sister-mothers
toasting the post pandemic
opening of this
end of the road town.
How can I say it?
I used to run and run.
I know that high.
My body did my bidding.
And so much wanting.
Such a drug. It wanes.
The constant longing
for more than life
can offer a young mother
already rich with children.
Joy and regret.
Strange bedfellows.
All of that in me today
in the quiet, and my love
dozing here on the sofa,
his long legs draped across
my lap, hands folded
on his belly, head tilted up
on a pillow, beautiful
in that awful pose.
We both and all of us
are for the pyre.
It’s not a metaphor.
We’ve watched it burn.
Absorbed its warmth.
But now! We are alive,
my love and I, these bones,
turning to look at each other
from time to time,
my writing arm in the sun.
Fish Heads
after Raymond Carver
Ted Fish made heads out of clay.
He was known for it, loved.
These heads are all over Salida.
Pinch lipped busts in shop windows.
Bobbing ornaments in dead trees.
One, a skinless, meat-red monolith
sits on a bank among boulders,
casting the line of its low gaze
over the Arkansas, a marker
for boaters to measure depth.
I never knew him except through
others’ grief. He died a few
weeks before I moved there.
On the table. Under the knife.
His heart.
Two heads came into my hands
in round about ways. One
from a new friend, fellow artist
and co-worker, Ben, whose
eyes teared up when he handed
it to me, a porcelain, grimacing,
two-faced thing with a hole
clear through the crown to
the throat, passage for some jute
rope I’ve planned for years to string
with fat, glass beads the color
of Caribbean swells. Maybe
I’ll finally get to it. After a story,
Barbara, poet who refuses
public farewells and left his funeral
early, gave me the other: a black face—
blue edged, sort of grinning—emerging
from white porcelain slab. The whole
thing attached to a small black canvas
with two long copper wire stitches.
I placed it on the piano where sheet
music should perch. The piano
is always out of tune, but my son
plays it anyway. Two nights ago,
on a stop as he was driving through,
the tiny head rang, watery
with my son’s invented song.
When I hugged him hello
and later goodbye, hard, I felt him
tremble, quaking in the core, a dark
face pressing through his body
into mine. In the kitchen, he talked
in low, steady tones, like there
was earth under his feet, said
when he gets back he’s drying out,
going to stop filling the hole
with every dead sailor in the sea.
“You can do it,” I said, “change karma,
consequence.” Which was too much,
another hole. You can do it is all I meant,
but saying less is hard for me. He knows.
“Thank you,” he said, and for a second,
soft eyed, lost himself among crumbs
on the counter. Then raised his head.
Affording Sugar
On mother’s day I’m up early,
peeking in on my child,
wiping up cat vomit, sharing
yesterday’s beet scraps
with five chickens in the run,
feeding two dogs who never tire
of my touch. My husband
and youngest son, who arrived
last night while I slept,
are still asleep, bless them,
giant men whose lives happen
above my head, witnessing
the dusty tops of fridges
everywhere they go. They know.
I’m down here, whisking matcha,
marveling at cedar shadows
quaking across dusty windows,
a sun rising through smoke
over the Sangres, boiling
four parts water to one part
sugar for the hummingbird
we heard zipping about this week,
looking for our sweet life, the one
my grandmother gave me
growing my sweet mother inside,
whose tiny body already cradled
all the eggs she’d ever release,
including me, so lucky.
The night before I turned 51
I dreamed my father next to me
holding my hand through a parking lot,
his full cheeked smile held inside
those radiating parentheses reaching
out like endless arms from his eyes—
like mine in the brightest sunlight,
caught laughing in a rearview mirror.
(I learned to love my smile by loving his.)
We walked like this toward some store
I wanted to avoid, so he wouldn’t feel
he had to buy me something, the coat
I wanted, or some other ephemeral
thready thing to make up for a lifetime
of missing him, missing him, missing him.
I rehearsed in my mind what I wanted
him to know: I forgive you every day.
I woke before I said it, distracted by
a gallery of Japanese woodcut prints,
one of them a curious face watching us
pass as I noticed us drift across glass.
Building
A couple walks
into a house and knows
it is the one.
For years they
will bend it
and each other
toward
the life they want.
Around beds
of irises and echinacea
her gully rocks doze.
His callouses raise
walls for chickens,
basil, arugula,
pour a foundation,
puzzle together a dome.
Her toddler task:
hand up
triangular panes
of glass one by one
and wait
until he is done
with other
buildings paying
bills, feeding children.
Their silent fights
could fell a pine,
peel a porch,
invent new words.
Their tenderness
could birth a
sutra, decades,
this church.
New Pecking Order
It is hard to abide
the cruelty of chickens
raised from chicks.
You give the Easter Eggers
names that curse them,
like Curious Georgia, the gentle
smart, blond one who always
looked up from the litter,
eyeing you like a giant god
whose hand giveth,
or let a little girl name one
something edible like Brownie,
or your ironic teenage son
dub the tan one Sweet and Sour.
Worst of all, you yourself
name three Plymouth Barred Rocks
you can’t tell apart The Morrigan,
after the Irish triple goddess of war.
You even learn and then forget
how to pronounce their Gaelic names:
Macha, Nemain, Badb.
All but one of six are tattered now,
more or less plucked.
Curious Georgia? back bald
and bloody rumped!
The fully feathered one,
maybe Macha, you snatch and lock
in chicken jail just inside the run,
watch Curious Georgia’s
tail feathers re-grow as she struts
and shits across the chicken wire
roof of her tormentor who paces
frantically below, looking up.
KCRT Radio Interview
Enjoy this radio interview with Eli Debono of KCRT 99.3, based in Trinidad, Colorado, a few days before my reading for Corazon de Trinidad, hosted by the wonderful Hilary Depolo.