Poetry by Rose Jenny

On the Other Side of the Smokies

I am building a home inside a boy,
forged in combustible straw, sticks
that branch out and break, bricks
that fall upon a stolen cornerstone.

On the south side of Charlotte,
in an old chapel, a hole, a tar pit,
I sank into the prehistoric whispers
of ghost fathers, of forgotten sons.

On the west side of Tennessee,
I will shake the hand of the father
of the son who holds me, folds
me back into my natural shape.

           On the side that is not a side,
           that is my center, that is the boy
           sliding rings on my fingers,
           that has always been you,

we pack a go bag, stuff the mattress
you make of me inside, your home.