Poetry — May 26, 2011 14:14 — 1 Comment

Salt Wife Within – Rachel Welty

Her weird bride’s tiny body once lay bent inside a shell,
the shell a locket, she a photograph. Held by a metal

clasp, the memento of a larger portable romance.
Who hung her there, who kept her for his sake is God, and so

she hovered over the circumference of all four oceans
before born of a bird, who kept her warm until she came

out, bruised by shell and slick with yolk. The little space she takes up:
a little spit lost in a glass of juice. The scarcely-there line of pantyhose.

Her eternal wristbone ticks behind a thick watch, kept
from total disappearance by a pair of straps, she stands

a strand of semi-precious stones. The whole rim of the beach
glisters baroque with pearl, diaspora of unchosen

shells, vestment of the pacific crust, an ephod of lace.

She attends the beach where there’s a congregation gathered
to cast ashes. She doesn’t know the woman

whose decease has caused this. The woman has been carried here
in a circular can, the kind one might throw eggshells in.

She knows no elegies, just litanies, just knows what God
does, knows the living body’s need for salt, the body’s need

for other bodies, the body’s need to wrap itself, some
times in kelp. She came to feel something old against her heel again,

something borrowed from the desert, a little of the earth
come loose. And there was nothing to do in the temple, there

was no way to curl up. Everything was grief-proofed, rubber
at the edges. The mourners gather close. They look more like

God in the way they gather clustered, near the abalone.
I am a tiny bee, she thinks, dancing in the world’s shutter.

Bio:

Rachel Welty is an MFA student at the University of Washington. She is currently working on her thesis manuscript, which is a study of the “temple before temples,” that is, before the catalog of temples, the stupa, wat, pagoda, basilica, cathedral, church, catholicon, synagogue, Holy Place, darbemeh, fanum, hof, shrine, there was a vast wilderness, there was the body, there was the household. Her poems often take the form of erasure (though not always – their law is meditation rather than prescription), and offer a poetic memory of those lost temples.

One Comment

  1. Mrs. R. says:

    As so often happens when I step into your poetry – I am left breathless.

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What am I?

Bioluminescent eye
That sees by the shine
Of its own light. Lies

Blind me. I am the seventh human sense
And my stepchild,
Consequence;

Scientists can't find me.

Januswise I make us men;
Glamour
Was my image then—

Remind me:

The awful fall up off all fours
From the forest
To the hours…

Tick, Tock: Divine me.

-- Richard Kenney