Reliquary

Poem

Moving day approaches
The accumulated things of the garage,
     the closets, the basement, under the bed
     even the back of my bottom drawer
Begin to clutter my thoughts too

And moving should be a cleansing ritual
A time to contemplate household objects,
     to purge those not worthy of boxes or bubble wrap,
Making of them an offering to the thrift store
     perhaps or the landfill

But some things I just can’t throw away
     gaudy tole-painted Halloween decorations,
     old quilts too shabby it seems even for dogs,
Considering this trash, I entertain the thought
     that some dead ancestor has intervened

Someone who had a body and wants it back;
     perhaps only this kitsch remains from
A houseful of matter organized in the form of
porcelain saucers and cable-knit sweaters and
     a kitchen table of quarter-sawn oak

Someone animated by post-mortal information
A secret about what it means to
     put on this flesh, to exercise dominion
     over even the most inconsequential clod of dirt
A nothing that exerts its own gravitational pull

Or maybe the knowledge that her spirit
     also gave this matter life
Painted it by hand; displayed it every October for years
     this configuration not eligible for resurrection
Making me remember the incorruption to come

About the author(s)

This poem won second place in the BYU Studies 2006 poetry contest.

Notes

 

Purchase this Issue

Share This Article With Someone

Share This Article With Someone

Print ISSN: 2837-0031
Online ISSN: 2837-004X

Next:
Prayer