And So It Goes
I am birthed from the womb
of women, my body covered
in blood, the blood of my
mother.
My first cry is one of
battle,
already a warrior which
society
will soon try to silence.
My first steps are in the
direction
you point me instead of
where
I want to go.
When I say no, you tell me
yes.
You take away my voice and
feed me lies. You do not
know
how to listen to the earth
so I
must learn to ask.
You have no idea how to
create
poetry with your words so I
have
come to sit by the edge of
the
river to learn the language
of
of all that is holy.
She Is Here
You know she is here.
You feel her in your breath
and hear her talk to you
through the crows.
You sense her watch you
sleep and feel her release
your dreams that were
years ago written in the
palms of her hands.
You know it is her when
the flames of the fire dance
in the shadows and you
hear the moon whisper it's
secrets in your ear.
You taste her spells when
she pricks her finger on the
tip of a star and drizzles
them
into your mouth. You smell
her
in the garden where the
nightshade grows.
Before the arrival of dawn
you feel her touch the mark
just under your right breast
that brands you as one of
her
own. You know then that
the witch is here.
The Devil's Trumpet of Reality
With dilated pupils we stare
into the
fire and imagine caramel
melting.
Time slips into a long ago
winter
where the ancient scream of
the raven
makes us place our hands
over our ears
and long for our mothers.
The afternoon has settled
into a night as
black as coal and finds us
mesmerized
by the headlights of cars
that bobble
up and down the winding
mountain roads.
We snuggle closer under the
cover of
bear pelts to ward off the
chill and our
fear of ghosts, the earth
vibrating with the
rush of hundreds of marching
feet.
A shaft of moonlight
silhouettes the men
in kilts on their way to
Culloden and a
luminous white horse, pale
as death rides
through the veil.
The forest becomes as quiet
as a library
until the flapping wings of
pterodactyls
rustle the poems from the
trees that drink
from the river.
The Cailleach touches her
finger to her
lips as songs of mourning
play from
somewhere on a radio.
Suddenly, hungry as bears,
we look
longingly at our empty bowls
of mutton
eaten hours ago. With our
now parched
throats, we swallow the
devil's trumpet
of reality and slip back
into acid laced
dreams.
Dear Muse
Where are we going today?
Will it be to touch the
stars
and taste the moon?
Will we drink tea with the
fairies and swim with the
whales?
How will we dress? Will it
be in glittery masks of gold
and elegant gowns or in
spinning tutus and combat
boots?
How shall we wear our hair?
Will it be like Rapunzel's
or
shall we be flappers and
crop
it in a bob?
Will we find holiness in
just
one line or will we cast our
nets wide and fill an ocean
with words?
Wherever we go, whatever
we do, let's break all the
rules.
Moonbeams & Shooting Stars
In sleep you illuminate her
dreams.
She worships you as all that
is holy
to the dark of night.
When your belly is round she
gathers
with women and dances naked
under your spell.
She embraces your moods and
flows with your tides and
bleeds
in the lodge that bears your
name.
Dipping oars into the river,
she looks
to you as guide and follows
your
silver ribbon to the sea.
She watches as the stars
bloom around
you and on nights when you
hide
behind a cloud she will
lasso a
lone shooting star and place
it in
a jar by her window.
On the night of the lunar
eclipse when
the sky is deep ink black,
she reaches
into that jar, eats the
brightest star
and soon falls asleep with
her arms
around the dying moon.
The poets are now
intoxicated by her
pull on their hearts as they
watch
her glow, reborn from the
light of
a star.
Karen A VandenBos - Once upon a time, Karen A VandenBos was born on a warm July morn in Kalamazoo, MI. She can be found unleashing her imagination in two online writing groups and her writing has been published in Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Blue Heron Review, The Rye Whiskey Review, One Art: a journal of poetry, Anti-Heroin Chic, The Ekphrastic Review and others.
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