Resident Itinerant Drifter, With Apologies to the Yearning in my Chest for a Place to Hang my Hat

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  1. Impostor’s Summer

I brought no pictures to hang on the wall.

Before I left, I cut my hair

and saw for the first time a woman whose body

I could stand to walk around in, a woman sure

of herself, so I know I’m not the girl in the pictures.

I try to draw cold, hard lines between here and there.

Besides, I don’t need the pictures:

the woods outside my window are my father,

the moonlight my mother, the books I read my siblings.

In the sticky heat of July afternoon, caught

in a rare moment of levity, I pen a letter

and send it home — no reply.

I am no bird — wayfarer, woodland creature,

woman I am, nothing more, or less —

and no net ensnares me. But I want to float

up and out of myself and into the song

of the bluebird. Tu-a-wee.

I paint a picture for my mother, the real one,

and she hangs it in the bathroom in the house

I grew up in. Home? No, that isn’t it, at all.

  1. Autumn Untethering

Thanksgiving is late this year. The trees

are nearly bare

      except for the maples

      burning a full, deep red

      like the flame of a phoenix before it turns

                  to ashes,

and the crumbling stretch highway to my parents’ house

is a tired, sweeping immensity that I can spread myself out across

with no definite shape until I reach the horizon

and then some

or disappear entirely, unraveling like the seam

      of a well-worn sweater,         

                              trailing all the places I’ve been.

At supper, I am either full or starving depending on who asks,

and we sit in rigid chairs and try to not let ourselves spill into each other.

I am searching for some semblance of settling but there are only corridors

to the spaces in between the spaces in between, pieces of myself kept in boxes

lining the hallways — for continency’s sake, in case the next rendering of myself

doesn’t pan out.

One of these days, I’ll have to take them with me when I go, pile every last one into the trunk of my car and drive back down the highway to God knows where—I try to draw cold, hard lines between here and there.

      Everything around me is dying

            or making itself scarce,

shedding

                        the pieces that won’t make it through winter.

  1. T.S. Eliot in January

If I go out bare-skinned, sleepwalking into the morning,

the bite of the air feels almost like being held, almost,

if I stand stock-still and clench my fists, cleave

to January’s shaky breath, clutching it between my fingers.

  “My whole life I’ve been lonely,”

said to no one in particular,

 and I am answered with the echoing steps

of my own feet on stone streets. I keep my eyes fixed there­—

to look another in the eyes is to admit to the vacancy

of my own gaze (to have squeezed the universe into a ball,

to roll it towards some overwhelming question).

At six years old, maybe seven, I’d walk beside the fence during recess, following it back and forth, eyes fixed before my feet, humming. Would it have been worthwhile to have kept my gaze forward, to face the weight of the eyes on me? I try to draw cold, hard lines between here and there.

On my birthday in an empty house, I sit at the piano

and pick at a melody I thought I’d buried.

 (That corpse you planted last year in your garden, /has it begun to sprout?)

Winter has a way of smothering the bones

so that by its end they’re almost like that of a bird —

hollow and frail, brittle under pressure but apt for flight.

  1. Spring — or Recurring Apocalypses

While it’s still windy, before the heavy heat comes,

I linger a while longer in the bright quiet of the morning

to knock the frost off the words I buried alive last year.

(Prayers? Confessions? No, prospective longings

waiting to take root).

                  I dreamt I was in Eden the day before the world

fell apart. Mine was the first sin, a temptation

not of taste or knowledge but of ownership,

the gripping illusion that I could claim a garden

as my own, to draw cold, hard lines between here and there.

The pines are teetering, laughing and screaming

in the wind, and I wish I was one of them.

I could stay here, plant myself on the forest floor

and see what takes. But I am in the business of vagrancy.

  • Incarnation

The last summer before I move away, I am watching myself

from the outside, putting all the people I’ve been into neatly packed boxes.

There are no cold, hard lines, only streams of water flowing into each other.

I pack the pictures, trade something nebulous

for the palpability of the strange tragedy of home

and the warm advent of body.

NOVUS Literary and
Arts Journal
Lebanon, TN