Jacob’s Angel

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To write poetry is to keep watch

over your dwelling in a dark forest:

It isn’t often that some creature

catches your eye — most nights pass

without as much as a rustling in the trees.

But when it does, it grabs you, wrestles

you to the ground, and demands something of you.

Sometimes a few pennies, sometimes a warm meal,

and sometimes, it seems, your very life.

Sometimes it is the angel, holding you

by the hip, tenderly but with a strong grip,

and it is your great privilege to hold it tightly

and whisper sharply between your teeth,

I will not let go until you bless me.

And only when this scrappy bandit

of a creature is speaking the words over you

as you hold a knife to its throat

do you realize, as the morning sun

is finding its way through the trees, that you are staring yourself in the face.

NOVUS Literary and
Arts Journal
Lebanon, TN