poems by rachel kellum
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I Didn't Have to Wander Far
Clover is right here beneath me,
woven into grass, good friends.
Old Walt, I suppose, if I were
a grocery boy, a favorite sister,
a mother of men, as I am,
would want me to lie down
here with him, perpendicular,
my head on his chest, both
of us broken, both of us face up
into this willow where the sun
has travelled all night to throw
a thin, holey blanket over us.
A river breathes through tides
of faceted green, a sway, cooling
my blood quaking with preemptive
relief, a soothing reminder, respite
from what's to come. I store
the chill against oppressive heat
in my body's deep water, a battery.
Tree roots crawl along the surface,
snake through grassy clover,
gather what they can, gather me.
2021
with thanks to Rick Kempa for his walking writer's workshop, Riverbend Park, Palisade, CO