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delicious new poetry
Writing Prompts for the Cult of Dionysus
May 19, 2026
Writing Prompts for the Cult of Dionysus
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
'genuflect through showering roses' — poetry by Leila Lois
May 19, 2026
'genuflect through showering roses' — poetry by Leila Lois
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
'my hands fuss with the details' — poetry by Jason Davidson
May 19, 2026
'my hands fuss with the details' — poetry by Jason Davidson
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
'EVERYDAY I THOUGHT OF THE DEER' — poetry by Anna Drzewiecki
May 19, 2026
'EVERYDAY I THOUGHT OF THE DEER' — poetry by Anna Drzewiecki
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
'Tongue fat with want' — poetry by Isabel Galupo
May 19, 2026
'Tongue fat with want' — poetry by Isabel Galupo
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
'robe me in brightness' — poetry by Muheez Olawale
May 19, 2026
'robe me in brightness' — poetry by Muheez Olawale
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026
'understand that you make me pyrophoric' — poetry by Juliet Kahn
May 18, 2026
'understand that you make me pyrophoric' — poetry by Juliet Kahn
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'Let us darken your blood' — poetry by jessamyn duckwall
May 18, 2026
'Let us darken your blood' — poetry by jessamyn duckwall
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'dark in the blonde sea' — poetry by Heather Truett
May 18, 2026
'dark in the blonde sea' — poetry by Heather Truett
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'Unravel the strands of dawn ' — poetry by J. L. Yocum
May 18, 2026
'Unravel the strands of dawn ' — poetry by J. L. Yocum
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'blood ripple shimmer' — poetry by Savannah Manhattan
May 18, 2026
'blood ripple shimmer' — poetry by Savannah Manhattan
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'flesh fever our bed' — poetry by Adrian Ernesto Cepeda 
May 18, 2026
'flesh fever our bed' — poetry by Adrian Ernesto Cepeda 
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'blue hands wrapped with rosary' — poetry by Bernadette McComish
May 18, 2026
'blue hands wrapped with rosary' — poetry by Bernadette McComish
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'dancing in pleather dress' — poetry by Jill Khoury
May 18, 2026
'dancing in pleather dress' — poetry by Jill Khoury
May 18, 2026
May 18, 2026
'I will give you horses' — poetry by Johannes Göransson
March 28, 2026
'I will give you horses' — poetry by Johannes Göransson
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'Darling, clean up your heart' — poetry by Lavinia Liang
March 28, 2026
'Darling, clean up your heart' — poetry by Lavinia Liang
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'am I the lonely wicked one' — poetry by Lindsay Lusby
March 28, 2026
'am I the lonely wicked one' — poetry by Lindsay Lusby
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'flowers of hell, bonded in glitter' — poetry by Katie Doherty
March 28, 2026
'flowers of hell, bonded in glitter' — poetry by Katie Doherty
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'it is the scent of death and it is a wolfish girl' — poetry by Lena Kinder
March 28, 2026
'it is the scent of death and it is a wolfish girl' — poetry by Lena Kinder
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'plotting like a diabolical orchid' — poetry by Laura Cronk
March 28, 2026
'plotting like a diabolical orchid' — poetry by Laura Cronk
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'even in wilds, it sins' — poetry by Ann DeVilbiss
March 28, 2026
'even in wilds, it sins' — poetry by Ann DeVilbiss
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'I birth my own being' — poetry by Nichole Turnbloom
March 28, 2026
'I birth my own being' — poetry by Nichole Turnbloom
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'vespiaries brooding combs of quietness' — poetry by Susan Irvine
March 28, 2026
'vespiaries brooding combs of quietness' — poetry by Susan Irvine
March 28, 2026
March 28, 2026
'What comes after happiness?' — poetry by Robert McDonald
March 27, 2026
'What comes after happiness?' — poetry by Robert McDonald
March 27, 2026
March 27, 2026
‘the pale seam of spillage’ — poetry by Amanda Gaines
March 27, 2026
‘the pale seam of spillage’ — poetry by Amanda Gaines
March 27, 2026
March 27, 2026
'an assailing miasma' — poetry by Sadee Bee
March 27, 2026
'an assailing miasma' — poetry by Sadee Bee
March 27, 2026
March 27, 2026
' ghost of cinnamon, wet dog & bog blood' — poetry by Trista Edwards
March 27, 2026
' ghost of cinnamon, wet dog & bog blood' — poetry by Trista Edwards
March 27, 2026
March 27, 2026
'Make of me a piecemeal mound' — poetry by Matthew Gustafson
March 10, 2026
'Make of me a piecemeal mound' — poetry by Matthew Gustafson
March 10, 2026
March 10, 2026
'the fever always holds' — poetry by Abbie Allison
March 10, 2026
'the fever always holds' — poetry by Abbie Allison
March 10, 2026
March 10, 2026
'those petty midnights' — poetry by Zoë Davis
March 10, 2026
'those petty midnights' — poetry by Zoë Davis
March 10, 2026
March 10, 2026

A Child of Air by Ruth Nakamura

November 15, 2022

By Ruth Nakamura

A Child of Air

A large part of me connects to earth. I am solid ground, cannot swim well, though I enjoy being in gentle shallow water. I am rounder, heavier, curvier. Give me bread, wheat-stalks of the earth, ground and transformed, fluffy, give me a few slices of buttered bread, French bread from the market, oven bread from the Pueblos, let me use it to mop up red chile ladled atop over-easy eggs as a meal, mini harvest, and I am happy. 

But I am also a child of air. Give me the moon in a jar, an imaginative work of art or story, let me wallow, introverted, in creative writing, journaling, dream records. As the season changes, I look to the sky. Easily, I float there, follow the migratory birds. I can picture their journey, the temperature of the wind over each feather. The subtle colors they bend into the cooling evenings, ghosts of lavender, soft rills of pink. 

The long lines of Canadian geese traveling south along the Rio Grande river bring autumn in their wings, in their songs, a trill I grew up hearing, down in in our river valley home. A thread of sound to weave that feeling of changing light, a rounder, softer, dimmer gold, into my bones, a siren call to lift stifling heat, carry it away on monsoon clouds.

What is it about the season that makes creativity so prolific for me? Many of my poems unfold in the rite of autumn, her ritual of leaf flame. The entire world I inhabit steps into a kind of nostalgia, settling deeper into itself as I sink my feet into muddied banks of Guadelupe River, stand on the sluggish brown bank, become still as a snowy egret hunting the moon, her feathers speared with light of cottonwood gold. I wear the mask of Dia de Los Muertos. Think of marigolds and monarchs while there is still gilt to be seen, I too am filtered through the lens of dying leaves. 

It must be that I am witness to death. All around, insects are on their last flight, they glitter more than ever, the blaze of cicadas, the leap of grasshoppers, the gathering songs of butterflies, frantic, edged, then slowed and dulled, the last of the leaf chomp on my giant sunflowers, a feast for birds. 

It must be that I am witness to leaving. I take down the hummingbird feeders, they need to travel south with their colors and their songs, while wrapping myself in sweaters against desert chill, or tapestried jackets, don long sleeve ware to knit the warmth they must travel to find. The bluebirds. Gone. The geese, heralds, take weeks and are far more visible, bodies and bodies, a mass exodus. 

It must be that I am witness to gathering. The preparation of winter birds, they fatten themselves at the birdfeeders, gorge upon my giant sunflowers, grown from twenty-year-old seeds my dad gave me. Squirrels in the mountains run up ponderosa trunks with fattened cheeks. Mammalian fur thickens. The chile is roasted in front of grocery stores or we buy it in bulking sacks, pounds of it, peel, roast, repeat. Its splinters of smoky sharp smell breathe fall into the air. It is our leaving-summer-song. 

I stand here fully welcoming the season. Preparing for the stew with buttered bread, the early dark, the stacks of wood, the morning frost, smell of cedar woodsmoke sharp and clean as a blessing beneath starlight. A break from wildfires. Sometimes from the wind. Sheltered in the valley of mountains. A longer sleep. An assessment of memory and dream brought on by the call of the great horned owl at 2 a.m. 

It must be that all these things, they are old hand mirrors we hold up to peer within, finding ourselves inside, on the fringes. If we allow true sight, we find the connection to the world we walk. We are not separate from Her natural rhythm. 

Things go to ground, to inner sanctum. And so do we.  

In Poetry & Prose Tags Ruth Nakamura
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