Showing posts with label Elizabeth Bohnhorst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Bohnhorst. Show all posts
September 4, 2013
Elizabeth Bohnhorst
Longing
Let me belong to something lost
or forgotten. This could be all wrong
but the abstractions are real as the bathroom
tiles I press my palms to, the silver
sleeping in drawers.
Is it necessary to be forsaken to love?
Necessary to forsake to come whole?
I keep thinking, I want to go back, take
me back, but where? And to whom?
You see, I am searching for more
parameters, neglected spaces that
can belong to me, hold me in, hold
me. Lately, when you are gone, I touch
the many things in our home that never
get touched: the base of a lamp, socks
balled beneath the bed, a corner
where cobwebs loosen in vent-air—
their slow sashay into light.
Two Birds
I dropped out of college to learn the etiquette
of dying. This was years ago, when Grandfather
could still recite Shakespeare’s sonnets and sometimes piss
in the toilet. I was the custodian of his graying
body—wrangling with toenails thick as almonds,
swabbing the corners of his mouth for toothpaste,
the everyday grapple of heel into shoe. I am thinking
of an October afternoon, perhaps one
that seems the last, just a few shaky leaves
flagging from branches. Grandfather sleeps
in his chair, head back, jaw unhinged: I wait
for this. What I suffered from then was hunger,
and dreams blur when you need
so deeply—they are nothing but color,
pinks and reds, roiling like blood
in water. I ball beneath a blanket and doze,
the dream’s flesh stretching, a scape,
but this time with two birds, dead, wire
bones scratching across red sky. I awake
to Grandfather staring out the window, bored.
There is no dignity in death, his or mine.
A leaf lazes to the ground. Grandfather scratches
the back of his hand.
[editor's favorites, 2013]
CP
Elizabeth Bohnhorst is a teaching fellow at Georgia College and assistant poetry editor of Arts & Letters. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Pinch, The Dunes Review, Cutthroat, Found Michigan, and Trop.
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