swifts & s l o w s · a quarterly of crisscrossings
to give abundantly
Janet Passehl
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leaves move
collectively so heavily
lowered and raised by the wind
pressing down on the heat
masses of them genuflecting
from the edges of limbs
limbs so heavy and resistant
like laughter
heaving with it
rain
rain (rān) intransitive. To fall; To give abundantly.
To fail to give.
(Re)st)rain.
Fled.
transitive Requiring a direct object to complete meaning.
make the bed
rafters (plural) Spears through the head of the house.
us floating oarless
my hands fold
my hands fold like banana leaves around the varnished railing
yellow light not of rind but of the lemon’s pale secretions
this light impales me
who is outdoors am I
a knob that cannot turn
inertia
veils scents: thyme, mildew and I
cannot turn away our face
doors lined with paper schemes of drakes and mountains, whose interior am I?
minute hiker
dashed in ink
The children eat
The children eat while the women mill. Spills have turned the patterned rug into a stained battlefield.
Colors run freely in one corner. Lucy wonders why the other women are wearing their good clothes
and high shoes. Her toes look like slugs among the Jimmy Choos and Manolo Blahniks.
Cultural blanks.
Her toes are cold but her back is warmed by the sun filtering through the grilled window. She thinks, “The future is old”. She knows she has issues, and they will outlive her. She covers her womb with her stole.
a flounder of burials
a blunder of arsenals
a muscle of grievances
a blame of distances
a grub of pittances
a dare of clouds
a swift of raindrops
a bark of melancholies
a jabber of terrors
a moss of silences
a glomerate of children
a Gloria of bicycles
a grime of sorrows
an arrest of tendernesses
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Janet Passehl is a writer and artist. Her poetry collection Clutching Lambs was published by Negative Capability Press in 2014. She lives in estuarial Connecticut with her husband, their greyhound, and the ghosts of greyhounds past.