Where the Lost Things Go
by Leonore Hildebrandt
Her child is resting, tucked
against her back
as she walks the great forest.
It is raining––their umbrella
thrums a fitful rhythm,
trees rise to a monumental
darkness.
A path amounts to more than cairns
and sticks,
it is undeniable, like the
mottled feathers
they find scattered on the
gravel.
The eyes adjust to possibilities,
criss-crossing tales of malady
and comfort.
She talks to the child of hunger,
of dwellings underground.
A soggy doll someone left behind
stares into the ancient rain.
They return to their home,
unharmed. The child
understands that puppets, too,
have sorrows.
*
* * * *
"Where
the Lost Things Go" was first published
in Adanna
6, Fall 2016.
Leonore
Hildebrandt is the author of The
Work at Hand and The Next Unknown.
She has published poems and translations in the Cafe
Review, Cerise Press, the Cimarron Review, Denver Quarterly,
Drunken Boat, The Fiddlehead, Poetry Daily, and Poetry
Salzburg Review, among other journals. A native of Germany, Hildebrandt lives “off the grid” in Harrington,
Maine. She teaches writing at the University of Maine and serves on the
editorial board of the Beloit Poetry Journal.
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