Jena Woodhouse
Poems by Jena Woodhouse |
writingthere’s something somehow intimate
about the act of writing: I mean with paper and a pen, alone, words circling the brain and taking shape like little desert caravans across the page, strung out on the horizon of each rigid line, not rigidly, but shimmering like heat mirage with visions of the inner eye… Athens 1998 |
Fog at 5 a. mWhen milky fog hovers over the river,
I see autumn paddocks hallucinate ti-trees, paperbarks steaming, a swamp wreathed in ether, bovine forms moving more lightly than ruminants, collar bells chinking reminders of substance in a volatile, vapid world. I walk to the river to listen to water, |
Uninvited autumnWalking past the building
where hurt animals are brought to heal, between clouds’ graphite masses and storm-indigo of hills, recalling hosts of sunflowers once growing here to either side, tall enough to beam down on my face or even hide among, I realise there’s no other place to call my home but in my skin, whose pores, now sensing autumn rain, prime themselves for change and chill; and in my mind, where sunflowers glow out of season and undimmed… |
The style of silenceThere are no adjectives for this:
a state beyond the epithet, when at night it tries to rain, but there are only semblances: wind’s passing breath, the phantom drops that stir the grass, then silences. I should replace There are no messages. |
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