Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
jennifer-marie
jennifer-marie
American I'm a girl learning to live by two things: faith and words.
*“…where painfully and with wonder at having survived even this far…we are learning to make fire.”* - “Habitation,” Margaret Atwood slowly, our failed attempts drift back to us on breezes thick with unfurled smoke. we gasp for the cold air that stings our throats, and lay our ears to the earth. the heartbeat hums through the dirt – steady and slow, so we wrap our arms around each other and exhale. but we are learning to make fire, to lift embers with our fingertips from damp leaves, to tickle them in our palms, and wish them away. we watch them dance along twigs; we weave our fingers together; we whistle to the flecks and the sparks. and they kiss – with innocence, without hesitation. the earth hums low
0
Mar 7, 2012
Mar 7, 2012 at 10:23 AM UTC
We Are Learning to Make Fire
i. she told me to listen to the silence; count its beats, she said. my eyes slipped closed but all i could hear were her chandelier earrings swishing and her sticky fingers turning the page of ave maria. *hear the music. feel the notes within you as you breathe in and out*. i would have rather felt his hand in mine. ii. the last time it rained, i tried to count the drops. they hit the porch swing with such a force, i thought a bird had flown into the windowpane again. i licked my lips and drummed a finger against my thigh. *one two three four, two two three four three two three four*. before i counted a full measure, the rain stopped. iii. it was before sunrise, but after sunset when i heard the thump thump. so i curled a hand around your arm, and placed the other on your heart. i counted: *one and two and three and four, and two and two and three and four and* you kissed my hair and whispered – voice deep and raw: go back to sleep. but i waited until you snored, laid my head to your chest, and listened for the metronome.
0
Mar 7, 2012
Mar 7, 2012 at 10:22 AM UTC
Metronome
The day I turned nine, I hiked up             my honeysuckle tutu, and raced                         to find you –             there, sprawled out on the hissing asphalt driveway, with precise strokes of neon             sidewalk chalk, you were writing the words                         “I love you.”             We dotted our names with lop-                         sided stars and scribbled stick-figured versions of ourselves years and years             in the future. And when the first zig-                         zagged bolt crossed the sky, we screamed                                     and then laughed, loud                         barking laughs at the heavy raindrops. The night I turned twenty, I cried             myself to sleep, and tucked the paper under                         my crocheted blanket. With eyes             closed, I counted the colors behind my lids –                         three, four, a kaleidoscope. Your name still appeared though – inky, blurring into the foreground,                         along with that childhood chalk.
0
Mar 7, 2012
Mar 7, 2012 at 10:19 AM UTC
Chalk & Paper
she turned a shell over in her palm, ran a finger over the weathered pink lines. he said once *if you listen you can hear the seagulls and the hiss of the waves and the kissing foam*. but she had laughed – barked. you’re such a sap, she said. now she sat and the cold, wet sand clung in clumps to her legs. she cupped the shell in her hands and waited for the song.
0
Mar 7, 2012
Mar 7, 2012 at 10:19 AM UTC
Shell
she opened her eyes slowly, long feathered eyelashes beating like hummingbirds. one. blink. two. blink. three and – a hand stretched out, grasping at the ceiling, no… at the dust that leapt through pale prisms of light. she turned her head, buried her nose into the pillow and inhaled musk. but beyond the glass pane her companion cooed, then retreated further into the orange blossoms. inside, she sniffed  and wriggled then pressed a hand to her moist face. and closed her eyes
0
Mar 7, 2012
Mar 7, 2012 at 10:17 AM UTC
unfettered
We sit, cross- legged on a patch of sandpaper carpet, and we wait. You stare through me as my fingers dance over the stained tabletop. But you let me think, without interruption, or interrogation. Though somewhere, beyond the screened- in porch, your dog barks at a lizard. And I remember. Why you called me. Why there’s silence. Now you know, and now you moisten your lips and blink three times. But you never reach, because she left you breathless, because your chest heaved in pain for months on end. I lower my eyes, watch my ivory legs as they fold out like a crisp sheets. And I kiss your curls. And I leave, even though the hook that punctures my ribcage will always belong to you.
0
Feb 17, 2011
Feb 17, 2011 at 7:06 PM UTC
Something Like Closure
There’s a strand of pearls, and it clings to her little neck. So she twirls them free, around and around her finger until Mama slaps her hand. Mama’s tight lips stretch across her ashen face – wrinkles and all. Baby, hush, she tells the girl. *The priest’s gotta talk now. We gotta say goodbye soon*. And Mama presses the clean, powder blue Kleenex into her daughter’s hand. But the girl never cries. She merely watches, blinks her baby eyelashes, while Daddy rests in peace.
0
Jan 27, 2011
Jan 27, 2011 at 6:38 PM UTC
Baby
We almost had it, that golden spider-web ending, a halo hanging from dewy leaves. You looked up and smiled at it, pointed, marveled. But it was me – me who cut it down, who reached up and yanked, who watched the yarn unravel, spiral, fall. It was my hand that scooped damp twigs and dirt away, and made a shallow grave, and watched the halo flicker and fade. You stood, arms at your sides, defenseless, or else hopeless and watched my eulogy, and saw my mud-stained face cry, and did nothing at all.
0
Jan 8, 2011
Jan 8, 2011 at 3:24 PM UTC
Halo
He smelled like a fall evening –                       the distinct mix of dusty leaves, hay, and candy apples                                           combined with pumpkins and acorns. So I let him take my hand, his fingers weaving in between mine,                   the way the October stars gently twisted through the sky.                                             And we stood and looked up. For the longest time, there was silence save for the sound of                   a seventy-year old’s clapping shoes as she strolled across the                             dance floor, on her way to do-si-do with her husband. Appalachian hills gleamed under the harvest moon, as he smiled,                       asked if I would like to run through the corn maze with him. I said yes, of course I would, and would he be able to keep up with                      the six-year old sprinters who would beat us to the finish? He laughed, and the clouds overhead dispersed, revealing only velvet atmosphere.                                    We ran for minutes, tripping over our shoelaces, occasionally being startled by the tractor toting happy families                                         who were on hayrides together. But we made it To the finish, where we collapsed on the cool dirt, grasping our sides and                                          laughing as loud as we could.
0
Dec 18, 2010
Dec 18, 2010 at 9:36 AM UTC
Autumn
He smelled like a fall evening –                       the distinct mix of dusty leaves, hay, and candy apples                                           combined with pumpkins and acorns. So I let him take my hand, his fingers weaving in between mine,                   the way the October stars gently twisted through the sky.                                             And we stood and looked up. For the longest time, there was silence save for the sound of                   a seventy-year old’s clapping shoes as she strolled across the                             dance floor, on her way to do-si-do with her husband. Appalachian hills gleamed under the harvest moon, as he smiled,                       asked if I would like to run through the corn maze with him. I said yes, of course I would, and would he be able to keep up with                      the six-year old sprinters who would beat us to the finish? He laughed, and the clouds overhead dispersed, revealing only velvet atmosphere.                                    We ran for minutes, tripping over our shoelaces, occasionally being startled by the tractor toting happy families                                         who were on hayrides together. But we made it To the finish, where we collapsed on the cool dirt, grasping our sides and                                          laughing as loud as we could.
Continue reading...
19
We stood in the darkness, sharp air                      piercing our windpipes, and rubbed                      our hands together. Your eyes trailed across the empty skyline, life fading from behind azure pupils. I brushed back my hair, breathed – the white smoke                      spiraling up 34th street and into our old bedroom,                      over the paisley bedspread where she stretched. Her gold curls laughed, bounced, and then stopped abruptly.                      My hazel bewilderment met her manicured eyebrows.                                            I knew.                                           She realized. So I moved toward her shadow, and she blinked. I reached                      across her petite frame, and left the ring on our old                      bedside table. But I took                                            the flashlight,                                            because I am still afraid of the dark.
0
Dec 17, 2010
Dec 17, 2010 at 3:38 PM UTC
Divorce