What Poetry Told Me

Adela Najarro

Photo by @circilingsea

What Poetry Told Me

The week Poetry stayed at my house,

she kept a razor in a wooden box. Poetry

refused to abandon her ancestors and paid

homage to the octagonal black tourmaline

rising up from underneath the burden of

boulders. She joined in song with La Virgen

and burned down the barriers between us.

She was interested in rhyme and the metaphorical.

Her rhythm shattered glass, but she did not finish

what she began to carve into stone. She was fickle.

First she drank mead, then preferred a martini.

Poetry wore a new necklace every day. Still,

she prayed for us. Words as omens and talismans.

But she couldn’t really do anything. She never

made dinner or even brewed coffee.

She was horrible at baking.

Soon enough, Poetry abandoned everything,

left flour all over the counters,

the dough proofing unbaked in the oven.

On her way to the airport,

she texted one last entreaty,

something about an old oak tree

unfurling leaves, glossy and new

but with sharpened points

that can make a poet bleed.



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Poetry by Adela Najarro - Poetry series - Poetry Foundation.