This could be
my secret hour
when the loose
ends get gathered
up and arranged
in heirloom rows
with all the perfume
promise of ripe
summer plums.
When the fat lady
steps forward to sing,
the brilliance of her
aerial voice rising
in a luminous loop
beyond the spotlight;
beyond the canopies;
above the four corners.
When the surplus
and the shambles,
the rough residue
of regret, the trail
of gloom and tragedy,
the lament of unrelished
days, evaporate in a cogent
crisp of cloudless blue.
And all the things that
matter most, like mouth
to mouth inscriptions,
skin to skin sequels, the
feel of green and music,
the blush and whisper
of grandiose ideas, return
in a supreme sweep that
rises to the surface like yeast
and honey: a sweet surplus
of plenty to pocket for the road.
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About Pamela Kenley-Meschino
Pamela Kenley-Meschino grew up in England, and many of her poems reflect her connection to the English landscape and her love of nature. She was about twelve when she wrote her first poem, when she realized the elemental magic of capturing a feeling, an event, the transient splash of life within the small space of a poem.
She received an MA in Literature at Portland State University in Oregon where she lived with her husband and daughter for about fifteen years before moving to Long Island, New York. She currently teaches writing at Hofstra University.
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