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By Brooke Harries

In slow heat inside, fan whirls 

can­dle­light. I watch a film and fold 

 

cloth­ing. Think like a poem thinks.

Lately nothing blooms. The stairs shake. 

 

A neigh­bor triple-checks their lock. It makes 

my door boom. Home a place to wait out

 

power bills, tornado sirens. Low ceilings, 

wood cab­i­nets, nest-like. If I moved East 

 

to wet Mis­sis­sip­pi to be a poet, I am also 

a depressed Instruc­tor of English. 

 

Shoul­ders cramp, stomach tight 

as teeth. I’m bleed­ing in private, due to 

 

the betray­al of my dental implant. 

When I talk, words shuffle out.

 

I’m sorry to see them go. And while 

I can’t fix other people, I can 

 

reread Mrs. Dal­loway, notice every 

flower. It’s lonely turning bitter

 

phrases. I wish to be safe, not haunted, 

not for­got­ten, make up for angles 

 

my face isn’t pretty.

 

 

BROOKE HARRIES’ Brooke Harries’ work has appeared in or is forth­com­ing in Arkansas Review, Bird­coat Quar­ter­ly, Denver Quar­ter­ly, Laurel Review, North Amer­i­can Review, Puerto del Sol, Sala­man­der, Sixth Finch, Tilted House, Volume and else­where. She was awarded the Academy of Amer­i­can Poets Harold Taylor Prize, the Dorothy and Donald Strauss Dis­ser­ta­tion & Thesis Fel­low­ship, the UC Irvine Grad­u­ate Award for Excel­lence in Poetry, the Joan Johnson Award for Poetry, and the Part­ners for the Arts Emerg­ing Artist Award. She has an MFA from UC Irvine and is cur­rent­ly pur­su­ing a PhD at the Uni­ver­si­ty of South­ern Mississippi. 

This poem is part of the online edition of Stonecoast Review Issue 22. 

Photo by Anthony Tran

© 2024 Stonecoast Review. Indi­vid­ual copy­rights held by contributors.

The Stonecoast Review is the lit­er­ary journal of the Stonecoast MFA at the Uni­ver­si­ty of South­ern Maine.

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