
poems by rachel kellum
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Mountain Monsoon
Loud seconds turned ten minutes white.
Ice marbles shredded pines, and hundreds,
no, many thousands of tiny piñon cones
dropped like fists across flagstone paths
and bounced in drunken dance with hail
through carefully tended beds. Blood roses,
poppies, lilies, coneflowers, daisies,
hollyhocks, pots of mint, tomato, petunias,
basil, sage—all torn, bruised, deflowered
by odd stones, assault tangled up in rain
and new needles, everything now a sodden,
sad mulch. The quadrennial promise of pine
nuts lost—days later, ragged hands of hostas
raised a stand of pale poles. Purple buds
hung limp above green tatters, never bloomed
in surrender. Fire ants collected their nectar.