Kansas Plains
[1]
the power of words
over an endless skyway
rainstorms cross the plain
[2]
subterranean
sunflower seeds burn bright red
while the kettle’s on
[3]
cactus-court stairway
jackalopes surround the lake
honeysuckle whines
[4]
daughters and mothers
share sympathetic magic
beautiful troubles
[5]
prairie alchemists
write to moon-stained goddesses
riding their shotguns
[6]
dragon kite’s mélange
blocks early spring geese pathways
stirs starry-waters
[7]
satisfied with dirt
left in homes of famous dead
animus returns
[8]
havoc in the house
reaches darkening porches
crowds face their railroads
[9]
wild words appear
as poets chase the weather
open thunder-skies
[10]
tempests, tornadoes
their second spring lives out loud
naming the fires
[11]
no face, just slippage
as they complete Topeka
talk forbidden words
[12]
the dark glass woman
still weeps in prairie graveyards
a portrait for two
[13]
imagine the woods
unnaturally nappy
as poems uncurl
[14]
earthy luck rebirths
glancing old blood calendars
ghosts come back to town
[15]
promises suppose
possible geographies
sheltering shadows
[16]
through the open doors
into dream-realities
in this good warm place
[17]
take inventory
for middle-aged assemblage
watch contortionists
[18]
Kansas fields awake
let their summer games begin
beware of tourists
[19]
recalling Lot’s wife
memory slips a little
on its way back home
[20]
women have landed
inside booths, outside the door
let’s begin again
. . . . .
Poet: Susan Powers Bourne
Source: Kansas Women Poets
Process: Mixed cento haiku