When Everything You’ve Done and Everything That’s
Happened to You Is Not What Your Life Is
She’s not sure how her life happened or why—the evidence is
contradictory (unwise choices, the illnesses, grief). A goldfinch
sings in the pine, its wing a fragile shadow cast through lingering
light—the shape of silence.
There are things she keeps from herself—the nightmare she dreamt
and re-dreamt until, finally, it meant nothing. The bullet passed
through the leaf—the leaf didn’t fall.
The stone circle in her yard and the little house are solid in their
places—ringed with water and birds. The sapling she planted is firm
in the earth. Her puppy sleeps beside her, tail curled under his
small body (the other dogs’ ghosts always close). What else did she
want? Things she hoped for already begun—this is all good. Good.
And enough.
Even Now
(For My Father)
Memory is easy here, in springtime’s rimless light—and only a
little rain to pattern the sky. There’s a faint (perhaps
remembered) scent of wild violet. Something sweet that stays. Shadows
tumble through clouds. It’s been more than thirty years—your
death a grief that only now begins to know its name. All this time,
I’ve rebuilt you out of dead leaves and wind, dumb with a feeling
that even now, I can’t express—as if that dark were your
happiness and you ran to it, years too young to be dead; as if, even
now, you might open your hand and reach through time to where I wait.
Of
Other
It isn’t now or this patch of blue autumn, light skimmed like milk
without substance (its ghost on my lips). Or the way trees darken
before the sky, the way light slants through pines (my neighbor’s
lamp or the moon). It’s not the way night feels when I walk in
March, when snow melts into mud, and I smell grass again; when I
know, without seeing, that tight buds open high in the branches.
It’s not the expected order of things but moments of other (when
something startles you into knowing something other), and the
heaviness lifts inside you.
Tonight, wind pulled leaves from the sky to my feet and, suddenly
(without warning) a deer leapt from the thicket behind me—leapt and
disappeared—past me as I passed myself, my body filled with
absence, with air, a perfect mold of the light gone through it.
Bionote
Adele Kenny is the author of twenty-three books (poetry & nonfiction). Her poems, reviews, and articles have been published worldwide, and her poems have appeared in books and anthologies published by Crown, Tuttle, Shambhala, and McGraw-Hill. She is the recipient of various awards, including two poetry fellowships from the NJ State Arts Council, a Merton Poetry of the Sacred Award, and the 2012 International Book Award for Poetry. A former creative writing professor in the College of New Rochelle’s Graduate School, she is founding director of the Carriage House Poetry Series and poetry editor of Tiferet Journal. Active in readings and in private and agency-sponsored workshops, she has read in the US, England, Ireland, and France, and has twice been a featured reader at the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival. Website: www.Adelekenny.com/ The Music In It Poetry Blog: http://adelekenny.blogspot.com/
Adele Kenny is one of my FAVORITE poets. She's extraordinary. So happy to find these prose poems here! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteIf you don't have her book WHAT MATTERS, you should order a copy via Amazon. You won't be disappointed.
Superb poems—filled with nuance and making the most of prose poem form.
ReplyDeleteSuch an amazing departure from some of the prose poems I've read (many of which are totally surreal or just plain ridiculous). These have real substance and show mastery of poetry techniques.
ReplyDeleteThese poems by Adele Kenny show that line breaks and enjambments don't make a poem. All three poems have the ineffable quality that "defines" poetry, like the "something other" in the third poem. Wonderful!
ReplyDeleteProse poems are alive and doing well, particularly in the writing pen of Adele Kenny.
ReplyDeleteEvocative, rich and (excuse the cliche) sheer poetry.
Thanks for bringing to Poetry Pacific this level of poetry.
Basil Rouskas