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April 2021
Stephanie Kendrick
stephthepoet88@gmail.com / stephthepoet.org
Bio Note: I keep myself busy as a writer, grad student, Village Councilwoman, mother, wife and novice roller skater. I have a blue belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu but I'm truly a pacifist at heart. Nested in Albany, Ohio, I fancy myself an Appalachian-feminist poet. You might find my work in Northern Appalachia Review, Sheila-Na-Gig Editions, Ghost City Review and elsewhere.

Puppets

Our children gather in the square 
for the spectacle, 
skins turned inside out and back again. 

Councilmen slide their crocodile hands 
into the furs, 
forefingers move the tiny mouths
that hid cheekfuls of treasures hours before. 

During squirrel season in the village, 
we gather what we can—
creature, nut or fallen apples 
haloed by hungry flies. 

We hollow the insides,
pluck from shell, 
peel skin from meat, 
leave the bones behind.

After the show, jaws sore from laughter,
our children plot the hollowing of their Councilmen,
question if their tiny hands are large enough 
to move the mouths.
                        

Regret Is Not The Word

—For J. Robert Oppenheimer, one of the fathers of the atomic bomb.

200,000 dead, and he feels
his hands touch each body

at the blast. In sleep, 
he dreams of Hiroshima, plucks

buds from Cherry Blossoms. 
Rows and rows of pink clouds,

he works with duty to strip bare, 
shoves each petal into his mouth

hopes to taste their blood. 
He never finishes before sunrise. 
                        
©2021 Stephanie Kendrick
Editor's Note: If this poem(s) moves you please consider writing to the author (email address above) to tell her or him. You might say what it is about the poem that moves you. Writing to the author is what builds the community at Verse Virtual. It is very important. -JL
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