Because April is Poetry Month, we will be posting poetry sent to me by some of our members who are poets.
Catherine Carter
Photo by Terri Clark Photography in Sylva.
WITCH HAIRS
Not hairs. Boarbristles, thistle
thorns, catfish barbels,
wolf whiskers, sprung
from a nose and chin
that’ve called to each
other forty-five years
across the short chasm
of philtrum and lips, and only
now drawing nearer
and nearer, connected
by folds turned to grooves
turned to dry ditches
only deepened by the rare
brackish flash-flood.
Old women have always been
witches, and these are
the marks of the witch:
these wires with roots
deeper than teeth.
They smack of a witch-curse,
a desperate bargain,
the kind of deal
you strike with the dark
when there’s little
left in your hand—
two low hearts,
a single waiting spade—
a deal with the powers of air
and hair.
Catherine Carter’s
collections of poetry with LSU Press include The Memory of Gills, The
Swamp Monster at Home, and Larvae of the Nearest Stars. She is
a professor of English at Western Carolina University.
Catherine, your witch's heart always gets to the heart of anything and everything.
ReplyDeleteCatherine,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your poem very much.
Thank you, Brenda and Maren! I appreciate it so much. :-)
ReplyDelete