Maren O. Mitchell’s poems have appeared in the Red Clay Reader, “The Richmond Broom,” “The Arts Journal,” “Appalachian Journal” and “Journal of Kentucky Studies.” She has taught poetry at Blue Ridge Community College, Flat Rock, NC, and catalogued at the Carl Sandburg Home NHS. With her husband and cats, she lives in Young Harris, GA.
HARVEST MOON
Tonight,
light on this earth’s moon,
I want to slip you down
to my house tonight, moon
and take out of your
booming beacon tangerine section
an everlasting sweet toothshattering bite,
tonight moon, and when
I’m through, I’ll slip you up
(before our benefactor shines)
and no one, early morning moon
will ever know, juicy morning moon
until tomorrow, early night moon moon.
by Maren O. Mitchell
(Published in “The Arts Journal”)
NOT THE POEM
This isn’t the poem I want to be writing.
Unwritten, that poem hovers startlingly close:
the flying saucer whose origin,
motion,
change of direction,
are less than imaginable
and I, not in the time and the space
from which sighting is imaginable.
I’d much rather be writing of the stench
of marigolds on my fingertips pulling
me, nose first, into marigold heart.
Of breathing: a dangerous profession. In.
Out. And the insolence to do it again.
Of smiles exchanged. Instead,
I write of a cat-bitten grasshopper,
still grass hopping, entrails trailing
or of the Möbius strip of living
within sight of suicide. Maybe
it’s that every other lifetime
I write of waking after sleep
and this lifetime is the other.
by Maren O. Mitchell
(Published in “The Arts Journal”)
WESTERNESS
Fifty years ago Cat’s Ankle could have been
where you always wanted to live…ever since
you wanted to live some place.
Store fronts posture
to keep up with each other;
store purposes as constant as the Western illusion.
Hitching posts wait patiently beside parking meters
for dog food horses. Daytime walkers
become nighttime contenders for mutual fear.
Side streets take years off the town.
The woman raising her window
to let in her nightly purple sage
recognizes a friend in the plain midnight mirror,
the one who will be around as long as she.
And she is content. Although she’s read
that only six skins separate one body from another.
Further out, splotched by cottonwood groves,
headstones go back to Cole Younger and starlight.
But you must return to town—
the one shadow you fear, following.
The showdown with the sun,
the walk up Main Street’s canyon, await.
Always. And you always shoot yourself.
by Maren O. Mitchell
(Published in “The Richmond Broom”)
4 comments:
Great photo, Maren. Maren's poetry is the kind I must read more than once to glean every subtle nuance of meaning from the language.
Thanks for posting her work, Nancy.
Most enjoyable! I especially liked "NOT THE POEM". I will come back and read them again.
Maren's poems are always so interesting, and these three are no exception. I'm glad you featured her on your blog, Nancy.
Nancy,
Maren can really write a fine poem. They make me think. Thanks for sharing them. Also her photo was great! Glenda Barrett
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