Nancy Iannucci

Shooting Star   

 

If only I were hot enough

I’d slap your face so hard,

throw you into the steaming,

dark street, then watch you

from my window,

leaning against an

Edward Hopper streetlamp,

gazing up at me in disbelief.

 

Published in Last Leaves, 2020

 

 


 

Taking Back Eden

 

I’m not going to mow the grass. I’m going to water the weeds.

I’m not going to wear tight jeans. I’m going to strip and breathe.

I’m going to run to the woods. I’m going to release Eve.

I’m going to take back Eden.  I’m going to dismantle the wooden gate.

I’m going to let in the beasts. We’re going to eat everything.

We’re going to share the apples. We’re going to sing with snakes.

We’re going to swing from trees. We’re going to sleep with ease.

We’re not going to succumb; control will never come.

 

Published in Backward Trajectory, November 2021

 

 

 

 

Primitive Prayer 

 

I go outside at sundown,

pinning the stained-glass trail

to the Earth with ice cleats,

 

glorious snow under my feet.

The hawk screams above Creek Road.

Does anybody live in that blue house?

 

Hopper lonely, so Hopper lonely.

The snowbank at the side of the road

sits in the shape of a pew,

 

but I’d rather move with the mallards

slapping their wet feet, ready to fly.

I’m ready.

 

A songbird pounds

his pipe organ in the sky,

calling me up the hill.

 

I climb

breathing in the night air,

revived by this primitive prayer.

 

 

Published in Bluebird Word (mid-March 2022)

 




Nothing to Say 

 

I step outside

and scratch my white scruffy scarf

as the bitter wind confronts my face-

I take it in like a deep kiss, exhale,

then walk forward like Whitman.

 

I carefully place dead leaves

over allium, so sacred they are to me,

sleeping deep in the late, soft dirt,

then walk on like Whitman.

 

Bittersweet berries choke

this gray day red.

Hoof tracks follow me

Like Snow White 

but I walk like Whitman. 

 

I lay down by the Poestenkill creek,

seduced by its endless conversation.

I celebrate myself with a selfie

then loafe like Whitman,

with nothing like Whitman to say.

 

Published in After the Pause, March 2022

 

 

 

  

Witch     

 

 I run my fingers through their hair and inhale, tilting slender tillers.

            Our golden strands move together

when the winds speak to us - I understand their talk like the Lakota,

            Shinnecock, and Cherokee, but I’m none of them.

I’m a white woman with a woodland spirit on the prairie.

              I ride foxes and coyotes like stallions.

I high-five queen Anne’s lace cheering from the sidelines.

              I’m Stands with a Fist when the wolves come howling.

I heal myself with witch hazel, lavender, and hawthorn.

              I carry wood to the firepit where my ancestors perished.

I paint my face with their ashes and sing their songs.

              The trees breeze when I dance until their leaves are gone,

and soon, I will molder, too, for I am one with the earth, bound to none.

 

Published in Bluebird Word, February 2022




Nancy Byrne Iannucci is a widely published poet: Defenestration, Typehouse Literary Magazine, Glass: a Poetry Journal are some of the places you will find her. She is the author of two chapbooks, Temptation of Wood (Nixes Mate Review, 2018), and Goblin Fruit (Impspired, 2021); she is also a teacher, and woodland roamer. Visit her at www.nancybyrneiannucci.com




 

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The views and opinions expressed throughout belong to the individual artists and may or may not coincide with those of the other artists (or editors) represented within the magazine. Hobo Camp Review supports a free-for-all atmosphere of artistic expression, so enjoy the poetry, fiction, opinions, and artwork within, read with an open mind, and comment wisely. Thanks for stopping by the Camp!