Kathleen Hellen

Poetry

Kathleen Hellen is the author of The Only Country was the Color of My Skin, the award-winning collection Umberto’s Night, and two chapbooks, The Girl Who Loved Mothra and Pentimento. Featured on Poetry Daily and Verse Daily, her work has appeared or is forthcoming in American Letters and Commentary, Barrow Street, Cimarron Review, Colorado Review, The Massachusetts Review, New American Writing, New Letters, North American Review, Poetry East, and West Branch, among others. Hellen has won the Thomas Merton poetry prize and prizes from the H.O.W. Journal and Washington Square Review. For more on Kathleen visit: https://www.kathleenhellen.com/.

Trail, cleft

Atop the iceandrock—who knew we’d reached too far to one side of each other? how could we? Cold in our suspicions. Dressed as snowmen arms outstretched as far as sleeves allow the woodstarved season lying in collapse, the snow in temperatures degrading the chill that leads to early freeze. To vultures The proof in coma— who knew   the nature of the frozenwater? The wandering. Our boots like hooves

The tawny hour

—After Mallarmé two o’clock, the snow leaves off the offspring of the day, the doe leaving the fawn on spindle-legs to fend in camouflage the yellow grass, the leaves I’d forgotten to rake and set out for collection, leaves piling up under the non- fruit-bearing cherry like so many things these days (desire!) I’d forgotten the fawn a statue on the winter lawn but for the ears’ fantastic scissors