Poetry |

“River Bride”

River Bride

 

 

There’s a continent inside our bodies

built from the attar of Eve, a small boat in the river

of our veins & a burned-out church at the fourth fold

in the wrist. We must honor the rib that bears

the raw glow of use, the oar propelling us to an event

for which we’re improperly dressed. The flames

marrying the cattails at the water’s edge & the moths breaking

free at the broken places. All we’re trying to do is forget

where we’re going. We desire a fogged

mirror. A row of empty pews, begging our discovery.

Any metaphor to thwart the factual aspect

of death. The same is true in the child’s game. A mouth’s

compulsion to choose truth requires but a mild push

from the dock, a chipped tooth, yet we load our boats

with remnants of our own failed harvests & admit the fire

does more than keep us warm. The gospels tell me

I lived because God once grabbed evening

by the scruff & declared the world his lover. Women

fleeing the abbey to inspect the injuries of small children

blooming in the streets, as if God believed wounds

were anything other than a tarnished ring in the pocket.

& the women did this, why? When a girl returned

to the aged river to hold her skeleton to the light,

she’d know something of this world was gentle.

Contributor
Susan L. Leary

Susan L. Leary’s fourth poetry collection is Dressing the Bear (Trio House, 2024). Her poetry and nonfiction have appeared recently in Indiana Review, Diode Poetry Journal, Tahoma Literary ReviewCrab Creek Review, and Verse Daily. She holds an MFA from the University of Miami and lives in Indianapolis, IN.

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