Called
Out of the Wood
I
have no other way to leave the wild
where
human forms shake, an attempt
to
emerge as my stems
shore
onto tile. Some call us prisoners
sashes
tied to trees until we
become
trees ourselves. If a body
can be buried standing up
like
a ship’s mast headed for a wharf
then
panicked waves can speak a language
of
kelp. I’ve tried keeping time
with
lightening strikes, driven others
to
down shift
then
pushed them away
open
throttle. I collect words
like
oxygen, mouth engraved.
From unseen fingernails
after
Albert Watson’s "Loch Fada, Isle of Skye, Scotland" (USA) 2013
of the wind
in the four measures
of
the door
in the four corners
then another
I
hear a knock
but texture has barred
entrance.
I've knocked on this door before
like
praise
quiet surprise
in the shape of a tree.
A
cloud erupts
shoots up in B minor.
Reverse glitter--
a
portal appears
if I look closely
dropped orange-tinged shells
until
low notes screen me in.
I've dropped the blue
horizontal
with an apple in its mouth
can't
see the gull
or my wet boots
and can't see the shore
as
sky glitters down.
Choir for Doves
I
breathe in the grit that comes loose
if
we don't sing the right ballad in a minor key.
Fail
to hit the perfect note. And I’ve foregone
the crib like an orchestra conductor
unable
to connect all instruments together
or
like an astronomer who carries the planets
but
drops Pluto into Mars. In my head
a
recipe for stardust begins—
beyond
brittle brick. Some call it
bitterness,
but the gowns
made
from shimmer enclose dreams
in
the seams, doves hidden
in
each headdress, their slender beaks,
their
webbed feet, the cooing.
Shedding Her Skin
When
I reached the West coast of Ireland
limestone
cliffs, edge of land green with the dolmen
a
kind of burial, I tipped onto a boat for the island
limestone
reappearing.
I
searched for a selkie every time a seal raised her head, saw her
where
they caught seaweed in cages and near the clochan, beehive huts.
What
I could see from this shore, all my hopes in spring flowers
and
wondered would they bloom next year
reverie
more familiar like the back of a claw—
no,
softer, the idea of returning home where I buried my mother
I
thought, all done, no blur, father’s plot one up and one over
Veteran’s
plaque and fifteen years settled.
Then
home again, as I look for a selkie in my garden, the solo fox sparrow
speckled
lines along her breast, scuffs against the leaves—
she
could be my mother, mouth open for a minute, eyes alert.
She
could be a dream landing on our shores.
Emperor of the Forest
I
was without my father after the forest
took
him and then without the sticks,
floor
littered, asking the stones
for
answers. I traced the veins
of
sycamore leaves in my hands,
like
my father’s except mine had hours
to
blue. From trees grown full
some
fifty years, button balls
with
their spikes tossed from branches
scattered
the ground where seeds would spread
new
lives in spring, while logs
nursed
the fallen.
Country
of paper sounds
underfoot
and acorn whistles
needed
no passport
the
path an open drawbridge
where
wind and birds shed their voices
in
this city of rustles.
He
was much more than his twigs,
eyebrows
overgrown—
they
could not compete with broken corpuscles,
his
nose blowing like an emperor of the forest
punching
open
the
stuck silence,
a
man who gave up trying to rule us
with
breakfast. My brother and I were not his patients,
would
not be counselled, suffering his
thorny
stares, and on those
a
ladybug. As he scratched his head
a
number two pencil appeared
then
back into the recess of his full
head
of hair. No, we didn’t use our ears to listen
to
his whiskers, how they blew
while
his fingers branched out. In the end we had nothing
to
keep except the photos of his square lips
hidden
by the leaves.
Laurel Benjamin is a native of the
San Francisco Bay Area, where she invented a secret language with her brother.
She has work forthcoming or published in Lily Poetry
Review, Turning a Train of Thought Upside Down: An Anthology of Women's
Poetry, South Florida Poetry Journal, Trouvaille Review, One
Art, Ekphrastic Review, among others. Affiliated with the Bay Area
Women’s Poetry Salon and the Port Townsend Writers, she holds an MFA from Mills
College. She is a reader for Common Ground Review.
These are beautiful poems. They stilled my day, put me into a new headspace. I particularly loved these lines,
ReplyDelete"I traced the veins
of sycamore leaves in my hands,
like my father’s except mine had hours
to blue."