Witch Wife

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by Kiki Petrosino




  Witch Wife

  Witch Wife

  Poems

  Kiki Petrosino

  Sarabande Books

  Louisville, KY | Brooklyn, NY

  Copyright © 2017 Kiki Petrosino

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Petrosino, Kiki, 1979- author.

  Title: Witch wife : poems / by Kiki Petrosino.

  Description: First edition. | Louisville, KY : Sarabande Books, 2017. | Includes bibliographical references and index.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2017002605 (print) | LCCN 2017002874 (ebook) | ISBN 9781946448033 (hardcover : acid-free paper) | ISBN 9781946448040 (ebook)

  Classification: LCC PS3616.E868 A6 2017 (print) | LCC PS3616.E868 (ebook) | DDC 811/.6--dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017002605

  Interior and exterior design by Kristen Radtke.

  Manufactured in Canada.

  This book is printed on acid-free paper.

  Sarabande Books is a nonprofit literary organization.

  This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Kentucky Arts Council, the state arts agency, supports Sarabande Books with state tax dollars and federal funding from the National Endowment for the Arts.

  One

  Self-Portrait

  Young

  New South

  This Is How We Feed the Animals

  Contagion

  Maria

  Elegy

  Whole 30

  Thigh Gap

  First Girdle

  Voice Lesson

  Little Gals

  Sermon

  Two

  Pastoral

  Nocturne

  Twenty-One

  Study Abroad

  Europe

  Why Don’t You Wear a Black Crepe Glove Embroidered in Gold, Like the Hand That Bore a Falcon?

  Break-Up-A-Thalamion

  Let Me Tell You People Something

  Political Poem

  Afterlife

  Estival

  Doubloon Oath

  Three

  I Married a Horseman

  Ghosts

  Witch Wife

  Lament

  Vigil

  Prophecy

  Confession

  The Child Was in the Woods

  Prospera

  Four

  Nursery

  Gräpple

  Post-Apocalyptical

  Ought

  N/Ought

  Jantar Mantar

  The Temple at Govind Dev Ji

  Scarlet

  Letter to Monticello

  Purgatorio

  In memory of my grandmothers

  Cleopatra Beverly

  Michelina Petrosino

  forza e dolcezza

  One

  Self-Portrait

  Little gal, who knit thee?

  Dost thou know who knit thee?

  Gave thee milk & bid thee beg

  Slid a purse between your legs

  Stuffed thy brain with blooms of blight:

  algae, wool. You’re lichen-white.

  Gave to thee such vicious lungs

  for breathing glitter past your wrongs—

  Little gal, I’ll tell thee

  Little gal, I’ll tell thee!

  I, who cut your palms with glass

  & poured in poison tasse by tasse

  I am nimble. I am young.

  I peeled you with a pair of tongs.

  I laughed when no one loved you back

  & raked the mist to scarf your flesh.

  We come together in the dirt.

  I a rake & thou a twig;

  All day we watch the long pig dig.

  All day we watch the long pig dig.

  Young

  After Anne Sexton

  A thousand pilot lights ago

  when I’m a teenager half-gone to flab

  in a low ranch house crammed

  with ribboned handicrafts in January

  I go pulling all the false candy canes

  from the stale mulch out front

  clown-sun blinking whitely over me

  my bedroom window an ear

  painted shut to keep the calliope of dreams

  from sounding. Nearby, the Douglas Fir

  thickens over older strings of lights, the chipped

  blue bulbs & the gold, each wrapped in peeling floss

  & held by keloids to the scruff

  of an unloved trunk. Probably a million tiny

  ice crystals drift on their rainbow way

  while the feverish branches chafe & flake

  & I, in my runny custard body

  with its buried corkscrew of hate

  tell the tree my story-songs

  & think God can really hear

  above the cold & the snapping plastic canes

  boots, belly, my dreams, what’s wrong.

  New South

  am born

  light girl, light girl

  each step blessed but slant

  born in procession

  already my mother, her mother

  the same her mother, then

  her mother the same

  marching by night

  under southern pines

  or a dream of pines

  on the night road

  my feet grown strange

  my neck turning back

  over the dream of land

  we left or never left

  land of trouble where

  I’m always marching

  my hair cropped close

  my mothers beside me

  in robes & crowns so

  I go back, go forth

  light girl, light girl

  crammed with light

  & when my mothers say

  don’t you tell them about us

  don’t you ever tell

  I look down hard

  at my hands

  white webs opening

  somehow

  strange to

  myself

  This Is How We Feed the Animals

  First, we call them: Blood-Beasts. Double They.

  We sense them shining in our net of nerves.

  Countless. Pelted. Their mint-smoke smell, closer

  than we thought. This is how we track them

  with our bone dice, how we dig them a hole

  with the knives of our teeth. Will they fall in?

  We wait. But when we look, nothing has fallen.

  We throw some fresh hay into the hole. We lie

  in the sun, considering names. We think

  they have names. We think they secrete a liquor

  from their tongues which is a cure. Just once

  we kissed them: a season of air. But they

  wouldn’t stay, or drink from our hands. Now

  they come in the dark to hang their muzzles

  over our fence lines. We seem to feel their breath

  on our backs at night. This is how it is for us

  when the egg of sleep will not break:

  Grief-Marked. Heart-Lost.

  Contagion

  I wake up in my body & it’s worse

  than a war zone. My smoke-cloud of blood

  my hair grenade tick tick boom. It’s worse than

  a war zone when I cruise past your brunch. Just

  to get bread. Just ordering juice. I open my mouth

  & the War rolls out, dense as a foghorn. I can’t

  keep from squeezing my skull. I keep time-traveling

  back to the noon of my birth. Worse

  than a war zone that Sunday, that night, when I wept in the War

  of myself. That’s the first war I knew. It was worse

  than a wa
r.

  Maria

  She’d appear in the break before sleep.

  Her face a glass zero. Her dark buzzing.

  I was twelve. I sweated & begged

  to live. Back then, I believed she could

  spike me with faith, a silverweed stolon—

  she’d appear in the break before sleep

  pronouncing my name in her language

  of radial burn. Name, name, name, name.

  I was twelve. I sweated & begged

  in the dark. My sins hummed between us

  a ravel of birds, a lightning smell.

  She’d appear in the break before sleep

  & drift close. As if my face

  were hitched to a track which pulled her.

  But I was twelve. I sweated & begged

  until she dissolved: empty oval of air.

  Now I can’t think what I wished for instead.

  How I sweated & begged in the break before sleep.

  I was twelve. I was twelve. I was twelve.

  Elegy

  You died in the pith of August. You left us.

  In rageful choke, in dust: you left us.

  On your coffin lid: Going Home. A bluebird there.

  Plastic ribbons dripping down. You left us

  in a welter of bells & holy water. The Word

  of the Lord glazed shut the day. You left us

  to our sweat & our complaints, to our swollen wood-

  pulp tongues. Of course we U-turned, left

  the wrong way home. No birds

  glimmered through the balding pines. You left us

  to bleat & blister ourselves out, but my words

  hung, paint-thick in my chest. Nothing you left us

  made sense. Your college of clay cardinals, each bird

  a tiny fist of time. Is that what’s left of us

  down here? Absent engine, steel-hulled bird

  I was laughing over coffee when you left us

  for the edge of space. You must’ve felt a sword

  of light draw down your spine, & then—you left us

  honeycombed, here. No words for the slur

  of days that have wept through the world since you left us.

  & though I’m middle-named for you (Michelle, a word

  for the angel who salts the earth you left us

  digging in) my first name knits a tighter cord:

  Courteney, dark dweller. I wait where you left us.

  Whole 30

  After a winter of gluttony & grief

  I’m back on plan for good this time.

  I’ve ballooned to a specific kind of ugly

  the kind you hope to hide

  with body spray. But it gets worse

  after a winter of gluttony & grief.

  I’ve shown up for meatballs. For lemons

  whipped to weeping. Now I land my balloon

  for the specific kind of ugly

  salad oil is. Happy date night, darling.

  Happy coconut water + nutritional yeast.

  After this winter of gluttony & grief

  spring comes, stabbing her hard stem

  of anger in the throat. Even garlic scapes

  are flat balloons, their ugliness specific

  as my penmanship: green tubes of spice

  & hate. My body speaks the ugly testament

  that took all winter. It says: Gluttony & grief

  balloon, darling. Only kindness is specific.

  Thigh Gap

  It’s true: I have it

  though I hardly approve

  of anything it does.

  Supposed bend of light

  or smudge where two odd

  angles cross. I hardly see—

  can hardly do a thing

  with it. White zone of

  no flesh pressing

  into no. So low, I can’t

  scale or measure it. I used

  to think: OK! A clean sharp place

  to keep. Or: I’ll grow

  a thing! to keep, for me! But

  no. It’s just a ward

  to mark & mount, a loop

  I lope around with, so

  I count

  myself a realm

  of realms. I vote & vote.

  Turns out, we agree

  with everything we

  do, almost. We sweep

  the precincts

  of ourselves: the rooms

  between each rib

  & under them

  till we reach the fat

  red condo where

  our blood leans in.

  We live here now. Half

  heart, half townhouse.

  Come on down.

  Turn on that sweet TV.

  Our mise en place, our rugs

  & nooks: we’re full

  of stuff. We paint

  the furniture we couldn’t

  live without. It’s true

  at last: we have it all

  though we hardly know

  what any of it does.

  First Girdle

  For this glob of a girl who feeds like a grub. For her teeming belly-apron. For her frowning navel, sunk like a moon in the night-night lake. For the soft eggs of flab that hatch in her. For marbled thighs & indigo veins, her mattress flank. For a form of firmness, plastic lace tacked down with hidden rivets. For the crisscrossed orbitals of redness at her waist, the pinching tugs she sneaks to force the hems of her culottes down. Poor poreless receptacle for Presidential-fitness-test-sweat, poor pudding poured into too few pans. They haven’t made the polymer that may forgive her, yet. No pastel mesh exists to hold the semisweet chips melting in her mitts, nor the ingots of cold butter she filches from the fridge. What would you give to shunt her starfish hands & aphid appetite? Does anybody have a knife?

  Voice Lesson

  Hello, dumb vain Bird of Paradise.

  Time to shred your lungs’ silk kerchief.

  You can’t be pretty mouth & sing.

  Want some orange pip pip pips?

  Ain’t you lonesome on your little swing?

  You dumb vain Bird of Paradise.

  I see you doling seeds & ants to nobody.

  What a drag. You ain’t made for onliness.

  You can’t be pretty mouth & sing!

  All alone, all alone, all alone, all alone—

  Make your O like an egg. Like an egg, see:

  Hell-O. You dumb vain Bird of Paradise.

  Don’t swallow them stones. They dead

  like you might be awful soon, if you please.

  You can’t be pretty mouth & sing.

  Just how long will you peck around here

  when you ought to belt & caw? Halloo.

  Halloo, you dumb vain Bird of Paradise.

  You can’t be pretty mouth & sing.

  Little Gals

  They come at night

  on membranous

  wings. I’m a soft deer

  browsing the woods

  with strands of willow

  in my pelt.

  When they lean in

  to call me out

  I shiver & shine

  in my thicket

  of one.

  Do they know

  about the botch

  in my belly? I think

  it’s a gel

  where the white light

  rots.

  One says You know

  it’s past time you bred

  & opens her mouth

  full of egg teeth.

  You must have

  some kind of hatch for it

  says another

  Or hole says the third

  clicking.

  All three hang

  in the night air

  identical silk faces

  identical jaw wires

  wanting to scoop me

  into their high

  humming.

  I gallop deep

  in shade

  past grease-marked trees

  to t
he lake

  where March mud dashes

  up my burning

  legs.

  But soon

  I feel them again

  at my belly

  spinning

  their round nymphal

  selves, pressing

  their hundred

  eyes.

  There is a

  red delight

  in the heat & snap

  of their pincers.

  They’ve made themselves

  so much finer this time

  new mouthparts

  new bodies burrowing

  all through my undercoat

  where I let them dig down

  into the dim

  places.

  Sermon

  Who shall change my vile body into a glorious body

  when I know there’s glory at the end of my prayer?

  Who shall change my vile body into a glorious body?

  A lioness subdues all things to herself.

  Yes, even a lioness subdues all things to herself.

  Who shall change my vile body into a glorious body?

  When I talk to the lioness, sometimes she answers.

  When I talk my dragging talk, this is how she answers:

  Your vile body shall change into a glorious body.

  I’ve planted my claws in the lioness nation.

  With my claws in the dirt, I’ve pledged a whole nation.

  But who shall change my vile body into a glorious body?

  The Lord makes a lioness. She multiplies in gold.

  The Lord makes a wild lioness. Let her multiply in gold.

  But how shall my vile body change into a glorious body?

  O Lord, if my real life is the lioness hunting—

  if she’ll crown me with thunder when I get to her country—

  only then shall I come into glory, Lord

  when I drown when I drown when I drown when I drown.

  Two

  Pastoral

  Where did it start? In a city of gardens & muck.

  When I held someone close, in watery light.

  We drank & I bled all the way home.

  Red-orange light on my legs. Oh, wow—

  that blink-blink of bright, that flip of the pulse.

  Where did it start? In the garden, the muck

  where insects jumped in starry arcs. My body

  took shape, then. A greenhouse I entered alone.

  We drank & I bled all the way home.

  I wore so many clothes. Cotton, cotton, wool.

 

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