Poetry Friday – Bridget Pegeen Kelly

August 28, 2009

The Leaving

by Bridget Pegeen Kelly

My father said I could not do it,

but all night I picked the peaches.

The orchard was still, the canals ran steadily.

I was a girl then, my chest its own walled garden.

How many ladders to gather an orchard?

I had only one and a long patience with lit hands

and the looking of the stars which moved right through me

the way the water moved through the canals with a voice

that seemed to speak of this moonless gathering

and those who had gathered before me.

I put the peaches in the pond’s cold water,

all night up the ladder and down, all night my hands

twisting fruit as if I were entering a thousand doors,

all night my back a straight road to the sky.

And then out of its own goodness, out

of the far fields of the stars, the morning came,

and inside me was the stillness a bell possesses

just after it has been rung, before the metal

begins to long again for the clapper’s stroke.

The light came over the orchard.

The canals were silver and then were not.

and the pond was–I could see as I laid

the last peach in the water–full of fish and eyes.

From Poets.Org

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One Response to “Poetry Friday – Bridget Pegeen Kelly”

  1. This is so beautiful it gives me chills. Thank you.

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