Charged Language
Poems by Cassandra Jeanne Castillo
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Friday, January 4, 2013
Presence
Night on night I laid,
stacked,
anxious like Jenga
sticks—
But slept.
Tonight writes
the twist in the midst-
Glory.
Shoulders rest, fire
beneath
my chest: learning Your
burning.
You’re burning, my
smile brimming.
Beneath bone flames
moan:
eyes drier, ringed out
with time.
Day’s right bookend
erased
Topples me into bright
life.
Love’s overflow still
slicing
into night; Presence
purrs
and pierces, hissing
joyous
songs, like kerosene.
The Best Stanza
The best stanza
written, walked.
Talked. Spun
minds, tugged
and healed hearts.
The best stanza written
broke every rule, and fulfilled every law.
Offended endless readers,
and loved individuals. This stanza
breathed and bravely bled. It loved. It loved most against
breathed and bravely bled. It loved. It loved most against
The greatest Writer’s
block :
wrath.
S l a u g h t e r e d
by the screaming
illiterate. And then,
the best stanza
stood and said
e v e r y t h i n g by
saying n o t h i n g
at all. Yet, let not
a word go wasted.
Now, we write
as light as that
two ton stone
solely because the
best stanza written
still lives.
I Think I Might Explode
It’s just unbelievable we have legs that get us
to point A and then to point B
and to C and D and E and F and
wherever we want to wander and
reroute because even at point Z we will
find U made us
and I am simply amazed at Your
not stopping amazingness and You even gave us
mouths to speak of what our heads
are thinking about because what if
where there is a hole for these mouths there just wasn’t
well then I would blow up like a balloon and pop like one
well then I would blow up like a balloon and pop like one
too or explode like Robbie’s volcano experiment or
maybe even a real one but instead of lava
there’d just be a lotta words everywhere
like the candy outta my busted piñata I know
I would So I love my mouth
So thank You for that hole in my face and thank You again
that tomorrow I will have the same
one because if I didn’t I wouldn’t
know how to use it and I couldn’t talk
about You or my brothers or my mother but You
know me so well You even know
the corners of all those tubes inside of
me that I’ve only seen drawings of and
I’m glad someone smart knows them like You
because I don’t trust all those pictures in those
books the teacher ladies make me read in school
But thank You for school because if I
didn’t go I just wouldn’t use the brain
You gave me and I’d just eat macaroni
and cheese all day or make my own piñatas
with macaroni and cheese inside all day so
thank You for school and thank You for
being amazing and maybe making me
a little
amazing too
2 Corinthians 2:14-16
Her aroma
fans
and folds
into him.
His inequity
surfaces;
his death is
uncovered,
tries to
hide: broken limb.
Chin to skin
in shame;
forbids his
breath.
Her entrance
spritzes
permanence and
tunes
his ears to the
voice
of a grave,
shredding his
purpose into
less
than mince.
Her finished
scent
heightens
his crave.
Strong, but
strong,
she reeks of
water.
She’s
pollen’s smell
of death,
holding life
against him,
like
oil to an
otter.
His life
sits on belief
in the quick
whiff
of her
existence:
the vigorous
tiff.
Slavery
The tireless tick sits,
digs in my two canals.
Must pretzel the needle
to please my high shoulders.
Slower than I admit
it: minutes master me.
I ache to taste Your pace.
To know peace. Outside this
field of a circled frame.
2 Corinthians 5:1
My work fell well. My screws loosened
with fire; flames licked my roof dry.
Quiet blazes cradled my windows,
wooden walls punched in: splintered pew.
My burnt frames hissed in bliss.
Lifted frame in a sun pillar elevator —
His work built perfect; mine joyfully
lost.
Hope unfolded: a thick, divine security
now in “a house not made with hands,
eternal in the heavens” where I reside.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
