Hopeless Romantic

by Kelli Lage (May 2024)

Man and Woman —Emil Nolde, 1938-45

 

 

End

Blue of my sin and red of your winter coated end.
I learn to traipse through purple of God’s end.

Body of a lampstand.
Hair of split ends.

Back throated prayer bathed in wine.
Townspeople watching, backbend.

Blood dyed hands.
She’s seen it before, speed dialing the reverend.

Split open every tree fallen nut.
See if their wombs of limbs extend.

Each sidewalk crack unveils realities—
if you see me in one, call me a friend.



Hopeless Romantic

My husband is a hopeless romantic.
I let him believe reality television couples never break up.
That life is something that can be full of
grass clippings, and wings, as much as people he’d never
know how to talk with, sift through forests with,
cultivate fields with,
finding love, despite not knowing
the harvest of it all.

My husband sees the sunrise, believes my fingers are magic,
and begs me to take a photograph,
with a camera who scores lucky shots.

My husband believes love lives in each stranger,
even if it doesn’t.
I tell him what he sees is beautiful.
Ask if I can try on his glass,
but I am all that is but blurred
and uneven and cynical.

My husband is a hopeless romantic.
I never tell him of broken chords,
only song, no matter how distant.



Right Now

As if vanilla stinging my cheeks could ever lose its charm.

My body, still mine / still the skin and flesh that grew
through scuffed knees, placing the six on the birthday calendar,
and hot salsa induced vomit.

The sun is playing with the trees as if
for the picturesque of the fleeting,
always giving us something to pine
After.

I’m grate for unidentifiable bodies of scents
that shock my system
into another time.

Trucks slow down on our road,
or speed up,
I’ll never understand the rev and fall
of an engine.
Their pace skips as if to see, as if to know.
It’s always him
Coming home.



Always Here

What is it that keeps driving me to look at the water?
To hope I see something in my grandma’s window?
All is still. But I wait for the rustle, the shadow, the spark.
Nothing but a dusty old attic.
Who do I want to hear me when I can’t say, “I grew up here?”
I see a small girl on a trike.
She’s heading back up the driveway.
So her expression is free for me to fill in.
My instinct is to cry.
But I want to live in the cry, the inward hunch of my chest,
not the moment after a cry.
We can all believe the light in the leaves is just for us,
can’t we?
I’m the only one with my head looking North.

 

Table of Contents

 

Kelli Lage is an assistant poetry editor at Bracken Magazine and is a Best of the Net and Pushcart nominated poet. She is the author of Early Cuts, I’m Glad We Did This, and Harvest is a Chapel. Lage’s work has appeared in Stanchion Zine, Maudlin House, The Lumiere Review, Welter Journal, and elsewhere. Her website is here.

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