Current
Issue

Volume 12.1

Lindsay Rockwell

The Democracy of Rain

When all my pretty little almosts       
          line up—eyes wide, shoulders squared 

& this world of buttermilk & doors       
          makes me a culled discomfort of wonder— 

mother, her bright wheels       
          father, a mountain of hushed tones 

& my eyes wet with awkward & regret,       
          the moon above the switchgrass pearls her saucer self. 

Mother calls her hands home.       
          Father calls his hands home. 

I call my feet home too—       
          to switchgrass. To fallen nests 

where an owl & minutes muscle the air       
          with patience. When our hands & feet return       

the democracy of rain slakes us clean.       
          We walk all our almosts into the pearled field.

Lindsay R

Lindsay Rockwell — poet, earthling and former oncologist—explores the shared landscape of poetry and the sacred. She’s recently published, or forthcoming in Guernica, Humana Obscura, Poetry Northwest, Poet Lore, Tupelo Quarterly, RADAR, SWWIM every day, among others. Her collection, GHOST FIRES, was published by Main Street Rag, April 2023. She is the recipient of the Andrew Glase Poetry Prize and fellowships from Vermont Studio Center and Edith Wharton/The Mount residency.

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