Poetry |

“magnificent height” & “[and what we have come to, says ‘childless’]”

magnificent height

 

 

here in the non-light of evening

i am not magnetic or ringed or blue

 

like a sliver no sentiment arrives

and the ceiling is one magnificent height

 

and the man at the restaurant says

he will buy me all 63 of saturn’s moons

 

to get away with something like lightning

as god must/does

 

to be tugged along      so enamored i keep

scuffing my feet

 

i try to see everything      little beads of salt

matted white cream      the man with the mooned brow

 

so enamored he keeps turning the sky

with his mouth

 

later we will all arrive in a similar order

in different fashion      anvils nuzzling our spines

 

so we go out      down roads      we purchase tickets

we tie our own arms like strings

 

and a weight falls down on our backs

and he touches the knife

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

[and what we have come to, says “childless”]

 

and what we have come to, says “childless,”

says choking the throat of the lineage,

shedding its veined ribbon, its seep.

goodbye the chin-cleft, the bulbed triceps,

his burnt umber hair, its soft sheen, and mine

like a curtain of grain, our eyes big as barrels

in the evening, collecting their pangs,

collecting their ruins like small statues,

lining them up for the moon to see. goodbye

that room i grew even before the cord was cut

and my throat filled with noise, that room nearly

ridding itself, red quince flowering in rain,

all the torment and trace of it, as we taper

to no echo and no shadow and no line.

Contributor
Mackenzie Kozak

Mackenzie Kozak is a poet and therapist living in Asheville, NC. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Boston Review, DIAGRAM, Missouri Review, Sixth Finch, and elsewhere. Mackenzie serves as an associate editor at Orison Books.

Posted in Poetry

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