» Poetry
Two Poems
Charlotte Pence
ODE TO IRON
It swings our doors.
unlocks our homes,
scuttles our oxygen.
Yet, we don’t think to thank it.
Only when it breaks,
blows, bleeds do we
know what we’ve loved
and simply haven’t called
by name—like the red
bird at the feeder.
Not ours, never ours.
And isn’t that why we point
and ask whoever is near,
Do you know what it’s called?
It isn’t the name we want
but to slash the theoretical
line known as the horizon,
break forth a new ocean
that flows like red,
and that softens the iron
between us.
MISJUDGMENTS
As a child, did you also
find yourself hiding
too long, too often,
in closet or clavicle, above
portico, below patella,
happily cobwebbed
under bed and attic hole?
And did you also, before
the thrush and toilet flush,
before the robin’s chirp
and coffee pot growl,
believe your mother would
enjoy it if you imprisoned yourself
behind the skinny dining-chair legs,
determined never to be found?
Underneath the white tablecloth,
you became a liminal being:
the space between
someone’s daughter
and someone’s lost daughter,
delighting too long
in your mother’s cries,
your name changing,
chambering, pulsing anew
as she pumped it each time.
And not that you knew who
was Demeter, you witnessed
a mother’s grief that day, delighting
as Greek gods do, in spinning
a moment like a China plate
on their fingertips,
marveling how swiftly life can go
from good to crash.
How quickly
her relief ripped around when you
jumped out, laughing. How
the hug you had imagined
slapped your face. How you
couldn’t blame her, not
even then. How, you knew,
you’d do it again.