Where
Poets Hang Their Art
No
poet cafe or galleries to
hang
our art.
Instead,
we gather with leaking
pens
fanned out in disarray across
ink
stained tables where we have
engaged
in our own revolution.
It
is on the page where we wrestle
with
words, dance with lightning,
excavate
caves, taste the mist, lift
the
veils and hang our hearts.
We
arrange words like morning
dew
on the petals of flowers
and
choose the stars over mud
caked
shoes and discarded
lovers
and eat the dying moon
for
breakfast.
Tasting
Kisses
I
hope when it happens I am not afraid.
I
hope I've lived the life I wanted and
dreamed
the dreams that were meant for
me
and loved you a thousand times more.
I
hope when it happens I am remembering
our
first kiss in the darkened hallway
outside
your apartment door.
Our
mouths hungry for each other, our
tongues
seeking new memories, so unlike
the
kiss of death that will one day come
unbidden,
cold, waxen, unyielding.
I
wonder whose heart will break first.
I
kissed someone who had swallowed my
future,
someone who tasted like burnt
butter
and wept on Halloween.
We
were meant to be star crossed lovers,
your
archer chasing my lions tale.
Our
kisses a conversation of sweet
surrender,
the moon spilling like milk
across
our twisted dancing legs and tongues.
As
our dreams tangled like seaweed just
below
the surface, Sunday bled into Tuesday
and
I knew I had finally kissed someone
who
had tasted my song.
(after
"I Hope When It Happens” by Diane Seuss)
Chasing
Thirst
I
thirst after slumber has left me with
tongue
stuck to roof of my mouth
and
breath that begs forgiveness.
A
thirst that asks of me to seek water.
I
thirst for stories where I sleep with
herons
at the top of trees and swim
to
the moon with turtles.
I
thirst for lullabies to fill my pockets
and
courage to wish upon shooting stars.
I
thirst for words that bleed with truth
and
for finding altars to rest my thoughts.
I
thirst for dewdrops when deserts become
too
dry and I weep sucking marrow from
the
dust of brittle bones.
I
thirst for air that tastes like honey and
for
cemeteries to give up their secrets.
I
thirst for the wisdom of Druids and
to
learn how to bend like the trees.
I
thirst for long quiet highways and
writing
that takes me home.
I
thirst for poems found in broken locks
and
winds that smell of magic.
I
long to know a thirst so dangerous that
it
drops me to my knees and prayer is
the
only answer.
Moments
With Blackbird
You
gave me a cloak of black feathers
and
wings to fly.
You
taught me about sacred law and magic
and
gave me entrance into the great mystery.
You
brought me songs to sing in the dead of night
and
taught me how to become a master of illusion
with
the ability to shape shift and see with
crossed
eyes.
You
appeared as an omen of change
merging
darkness with light and taught me
that
all things are born of women.
You
used your voice to “caw” me home.
And then came November and you gave
to
me nevermore.
Night
Travels
Slumbering,
spooned
together, wrapped
in
each others wings
we
float through dreams
traveling
the night sky.
With
birds eye views
we
are carried on
the
winds of time.
Below
us the chimneys
release
plumes of smoke
like
magic genies.
And
the houses pulse
with
the life of those
creating
stories within.
Here
and there a light
shines
thru a window
beckoning
us to listen
as
a mother soothes
her
children with a
sleepy
lullaby.
The
air tastes like
the
promise of rain
billowing
my skirt
like
a parachute as
we
soar above the
tree
tops that reach
for
our souls.
Drifting
homeward
over
our own little town
we
collect stars in
our
pockets and kiss
the
moon goodnight.
Slumbering,
we are
spooned
together,
traveling
the night sky.
Once upon a time, Karen A VandenBos
was born on a warm July morn in Kalamazoo, MI. Her youth was nourished by books
and writing. When adulthood opened the door, she was detoured to working in
health care for 30+ years and obtained her PhD in Holistic Health. She tumbled
into the realm of retirement landing on her feet and was reunited with her
creative spark. She can now be found contributing to two online writing groups
where she unleashes her imagination and trusts her pen to take her where she
needs to go. Her writing has been published online in The Ekphrastic Review
and Lothlorien Poetry Journal and some of her photographs have been
published in Blue Heron Review.
Exquisite poetry. Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteExcellent My Friend! I never imagined that my friend who lived two houses away would grow up to be a poet and photographer. I am so proud of you! Love, Cynthia
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! I was swept up in the image of each poem.
ReplyDeleteCrafty
Beautiful, touching, inspiring, moving. I love all of these and will enjoy revisiting them over and over. Thank you for this beautiful collection of heartfelt musings that aim straight for the heart. 💜💜💜
ReplyDelete