Tag: Poetry

  • Justice


    At the rim of the Grand Canyon,
    Without widening, announcing, or calling the eye—
    it gathers.

    Close to the ground,
    armed at every point,
    it holds what little comes—
    light taken in,
    water kept,
    time pressed inward
    until it thickens.

    In the long discipline of it—
    through heat, through absence,
    through the steady refusal of the earth to give—
    a form is made
    that does not bend outward.

    It keeps its boundary.

    And then—
    at the very places of defense—
    a breaking open.

    Not of the structure,
    but from within it.

    Red, rising at the tips,
    petals pushing through
    the same points that once kept distance,
    softness unfurling precisely
    where sharpness was required.

    The form remains—
    spine, circle,
    the careful architecture of survival—

    and yet, from that same design,
    another shape appears.

    On the surface—
    color, sudden,
    plain to the eye.

    Beneath—
    a long keeping,
    a measure held
    without witness,
    without haste.

    The cactus carries both at once,
    dividing nothing,
    choosing neither.

    And we, drawn to what widens,
    what opens easily to us,
    pass by—
    standing at the edge of what is vast,
    naming that grandeur,
    and missing what has taken form
    among the spines.

    In the keeping of it,
    in the exactness of boundary
    and the timing of its release,
    God gives:

    what holds its form,
    what keeps its boundary
    under pressure,
    without collapse—

    and what opens
    only where it has been formed to open,

    until what has been gathered in silence
    appears,
    not everywhere,
    but precisely—

    at its edge
    where strength
    becomes visible.

    —Iris Lennox

  • Hope


    Without reservoirs, pumps, or measured release—
    water roils beneath the surface,
    through stone, around roots,
    navigating the dark.

    In the slow movement along its path,
    through soil, around what resists it,
    a force gathers
    until the ground gives way.

    And then a spring, then a river—
    arriving as it was set in motion,
    current and lucidity together,
    depth and brightness inseparable.

    On the surface
    light scattering,
    quick movements, flickers—

    what we call joy.

    Below—
    weight and direction,
    a current that does not scatter
    or turn back—

    what we call peace.

    The river carries both at once,
    dividing nothing,
    choosing neither.

    And we, without instruments to measure belief,
    stand at the bank,
    calling that faith—
    to stay.

    When it reaches us,
    not as droplets,
    but as a rising beyond its edges,
    we find ourselves entered
    rather than filled.

    So what can be said of hope
    by those who wait for the river to be visible
    before they believe it is moving?

    In believing,
    in the quiet continuance of it,
    God gives:

    joy at the surface,
    quick, ungraspable,
    arriving in flashes,

    and peace—
    lower in the water,
    where nothing hurries,
    where the current keeps its direction
    without being seen.

    And hope—
    as the river
    when it exceeds its banks,

    moving through fields
    that were never called river,
    carrying its course
    beyond where we stood.

    —Iris Lennox

    Romans 15:13

  • Sisyphean Dreamer


    By Iris Lennox

    In many stories, we see a man overcoming great odds by wrestling with the weaknesses anchored inside himself, rather than those he must fight in the world around him.

    The age-old story of Man vs. Self.

    One of the most memorable tragic heroes in Greek mythology is Sisyphus, the prince whose moral foibles Zeus punishes by dooming him to roll a boulder up a hill eternally, the rock rolling back down each time he manages to muscle it to the top.

    The first time I heard this story, I was in seventh grade. We read it aloud in English class through timid and cracking voices. I should have known then that I had a serious bent toward the philosophical. The story captured both my imagination and my emotions to such an extent that I immediately felt what I can now identify as empathy for the main character. I wanted to reach beyond the centuries to help Sisyphus.

    Because I couldn’t do that, I settled on trying to prove the story wrong.

    This was my way of rectifying the deeds of Zeus and the fate of Sisyphus himself. It was also my way of closing the dissonance I felt as I considered the unfairness of the story. How had we, as a human race, allowed this man’s torment to survive in our books, our minds, our cultural imagination for so long?

    Clearly, it was up to me to change the narrative.

    Once the bell rang for lunch, I donned my invisible cape and set out on a dangerous adventure. Knowing we weren’t allowed on the soccer field unless we were in PE, I slipped past the lunchroom proctor, ducked under the railings, and made my way down the hill that led to the edge of the field. At the far end, the incline rose steeply enough to pass, in my mind, for a mountainside.

    My school was called Foothills Junior High. The name was not decorative. It sat at the base of a mountain in Los Angeles. I knew this was the place to right the wrongs set forth by the Greek gods.

    I looked for a rock. I never found one large enough to make the journey feel worthy, but I did find a kickball. Orange, round, just large enough to wedge between my shoulder and neck as I climbed on my hands and knees, pushing it upward with a kind of theatrical conviction that, in retrospect, revealed itself early.

    I made it to the top.

    My hands were filled with pebbles, my knees ground into denim and dirt. I stood there for a moment, the kickball in my grip, scanning the field beneath the dry California sun. A victory, unmistakable.

    And then, unlike Sisyphus, I made a decision.

    I would not let the rock roll back down. I would carry it.

    Halfway down the hill, I lost my footing.

    It happened quickly. Instinct took over. The ball slipped free. I watched it fall.

    Disaster.

    I tried again.

    Three times I made it to the top. Not once did I make it all the way down.

    Up the hill. Down the hill. Up again. Down again.

    The past returned as the present, and I heard the bell ring for science class.

    Maria Popova writes of Sisyphus:

    He may be a tragic hero, but he is first and foremost a hero, precisely for this unrelenting faith in the possibility of accomplishing the impossible. His optimistic tenacity renders him the epitome of the creative spirit.

    Jack White, in his song Over and Over and Over, gives the story another life:

    The Sisyphean dreamer
    My fibula and femur
    Hold the weight of the world
    (Over and over)

    The rock ‘n’ roller, the young and older
    Rolling back to the stroller
    (Over and over)

    One story, carried through different forms, returning again and again.

    And then, from Ecclesiastes:

    All streams run to the sea,
    but the sea is not full.
    To the place where the streams flow,
    there they flow again.

    What has been is what will be,
    and what has been done is what will be done,
    and there is nothing new under the sun.

    A repetition that feels, at times, unbearable.

    Life returns us to the same questions, the same efforts, and the same inclines. We strain, we lose our footing, we begin again. Something in us resists the cycle. Something else learns how to thrive within it.

    There is a kind of dignity in that.

    Not in escaping the hill,
    but in meeting it.

    Not once,
    but again.

    And again.

    So I think of that hillside near the soccer field.

    Of the orange ball slipping from my hands.

    Of the certainty I had that I could change the ending.

    And of the quiet realization that followed:

    that the story does not end,

    only continues—

    in the climb,
    in the fall,
    in the turning back.

    See you at the top of the hill.

    And again at the bottom.

  • Four and a Half Minutes


    Iris Lennox Poem
    The morning sun draws itself in lines
    across my hand as I lift the shades.
    Three succulents on the sill
    squint and awaken.

    I fill the kettle with filtered water,
    set it on the stove,
    and wait as heat gathers, quietly
    like the introduction of a song
    before the singing begins.

    I scoop the grounds into the press—
    piñon nut coffee from New Mexico,
    dark, resinous, faintly sweet,
    holding desert sun in its edges.

    The water stirs before it speaks.
    I watch the surface tremble,
    then rise into a low, certain boil.

    At the window, my black cat claims his post.
    A squirrel meets him there,
    small hands braced against the glass.
    They study each other
    as if to ask, "Oh, just you? Again?"

    In the living room, my white cat stretches long
    across the rug,
    pressing herself into the day.
    A small felt cat rests beside her—
    a careful replica,
    stitched into stillness.

    The kettle calls me back.
    I pour.

    Water meets grounds,
    and the air deepens—
    coffee blooms, expands,
    releases what it has carried.

    I stir once, twice,
    set the lid,
    and press the timer:
    four and a half minutes.

    I lean into the counter
    where the sun has already shifted.

    Steam lifts from the press,
    moves through the room
    beckoning even the walls to wake.

    The squirrel disappears.
    My black cat stays,
    newly enthralled by a robin hopping through grass.

    My white cat settles beside her smaller self.
    They rest in the same light,
    one breathing, one not.

    The timer sounds.
    I press the plunger down, slow, steady,
    feel the quiet resistance
    give way—
    a practice in patience
    amid anticipation.

    I pour the coffee.
    I lift the cup.
    I take the first sip.

    Another morning where
    God makes morning
    and succulents
    and sunlight
    and cats,

    and I, for my part, manage the coffee.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Question in the Sand


    As he leaned down toward the sand,
    his knees creaked under
    cotton trousers
    and then grew quiet again.

    Kneeling,
    he sunk his finger between
    a million grains
    to write a message there—
    first a W and then an H,
    followed by a
    Y?

    He drew a circle around the word
    as though the spelling alone
    lacked power to
    catch the eye of anyone
    who might be qualified
    to enter the quandary
    with him,
    for him,
    take it from his hands,
    lift the weight,
    and carry it away.

    His hair used to be black—
    until it was grey—
    and in the wind that
    hovered above land,
    after being cast
    from the sea,
    his curls lifted and fell
    like waves,
    answering the whims
    of the moon and
    gravity.

    He placed his hands
    on top of his thighs and stood,
    once more facing the
    mystery of tossing foam,
    his question scrawled
    below
    and below—
    in the center of himself—
    doubt churned
    under a stomach filled with
    acid and disaster.

    Like bricks,
    a collage of faces,
    a map filled with places,
    melancholy traces,
    unending races
    erected a wall inside his soul
    too high to climb,
    too wide to choose
    whether left or right
    might end the
    mounting fight.

    Hiding in plain sight,
    he felt alone
    until
    he was not—
    she stepped in close
    from a shadowy distance
    to share his pool of light,
    breaking through
    the clouds,
    illuminated by the night.
    The two stood staring,
    astonished—

    “How did you find me?”
    he asked—
    she had no certainty
    to give.
    “I don’t know,”
    was all she said—
    he brought one
    hand up to his mouth
    as though to stop
    the words from coming out.
    “I needed to be found.”

    They stood above
    the crudely scribbled “Why?”
    and respected its presence
    as a minnow respects a shark.
    However,
    they refused to bow their heads
    in reverence for the question and,
    instead, they walked together
    hand in hand, and
    waited for answers to
    roll in with the tide.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Legacy


    Ask the old ones.
    Not for stories—
    for dates, distances,
    what came first and what followed.

    Has anything like this happened before?

    A people hearing a voice
    from the middle of fire
    and continuing to breathe
    after the sentence ended.

    Fire does one thing well.
    It finishes what it starts.

    Yet there they stood,
    faces lit from below,
    listening to licks and flares
    carry meaning
    without turning kindling to ash.

    Or this—

    a nation taken out of another nation,
    not quietly,
    but with signs that carved faces
    and covered the sun,
    by a hand that did not hide itself,
    with a kind of persistence
    that left artifacts in places
    and on the skeletons that witnessed it.

    Ask Egypt,
    if ruins could answer.

    Ask the sea,
    which briefly agreed
    to try on the accoutrements of land
    and then returned
    to its original fashion.

    They were shown these things
    so they would know—
    this is how the account records it.

    Not suspect.
    Not wonder.

    Know
    that the voice was not one among many,
    not a possibility,
    a debate
    between equally convincing objections.

    Above, below—
    no second version waits
    to be discovered later.

    This is the claim
    as it has been carried forward.

    So they are told to keep it.

    Not out of fear,
    though fear was present.
    Not out of habit,
    though habit will come.

    Keep it
    so that when their children ask
    what happened in those days,
    they will not offer
    a softened account.

    Tell them
    they heard something
    that should have undone them
    and did not.

    Tell them
    they walked through what closed behind them.

    Tell them
    there was no comparison
    then,

    and there isn’t one now.

    —Iris Lennox

    Based on Deuteronomy 4:32-40
  • And Then I Was


    “Wait a minute, I wasn’t done.”
    “You’re done,” he said.

    Well, he didn’t say it. But he moved it.

    The tone of the words he didn’t say
    echoed
    like a cowbell on a neck
    between two mountainsides.

    Back and forth
    and back and forth
    until one forth
    and no more back.

    And, “You’re done.”

    But silent.

    A slippery tear fell down.

    But tears never roll
    in a straight line.

    They zigzag
    from your heart to your eyes
    and echo
    like a horn blown inside a cave.

    He didn’t say it
    but he showed it.

    And his movement was stillness.

    Like a door
    closing
    before you reach it.

    “Wait for me, I want to sit down.”
    “You’re too slow,” he said.

    Well, he didn’t say it. But he stood it.

    Stood over it
    like a calculation
    he could see from above.

    The mechanics of his breathing
    echoed
    like the ticking of a clock
    dropped inside a hollowed pot.

    Up and down
    and up and down my heart
    filled up
    and one more down
    and down.

    And, “Go faster.”

    But slow.

    An emptying of all that was,
    scattered on the ground.

    The pieces
    drifted
    like leaves
    between trees.

    “Wait a minute, I wasn’t done.”
    “You’re done,” he said.

    And I was.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Builders and Destroyers


    Spazuk, a brilliant artist who paints with fire.
    There are builders and
    those who tear down.

    The builders understand the angles—
    how weight settles into a beam,
    how a line must lean
    before it can stand.

    They take the time to
    dream,
    to envision,
    to let something unfinished
    sit beside them
    like a quiet companion.

    In the late hours,
    when the world settles into dew
    and the last light leaves the window,
    they see it—
    not yet formed,
    but certain enough
    to return to.

    They move toward it slowly.

    Hands learning the material—
    the first press too hard,
    the surface pushing back,
    then giving slightly under the thumb.

    There is a patience to it—
    a willingness to begin again
    without pretending
    that nothing failed
    along the way.

    And when it sits
    just right in the place
    where positive and negative space
    hold one another—
    where the weight rests
    without shifting,

    when something rises
    that did not exist before,

    they step back
    grateful
    to recognize it—

    not as completion,
    but as process and maybe
    cohesion.

    Something new to sit beside.
    Something to enter.

    Those who tear down
    move in starts.

    They do not linger
    in spaces where people
    or places
    or ideas
    are becoming.

    They look for structures already standing
    and rest their heads against
    pillars—cracked, flaking at the edges—
    trusting what still holds
    to hold for them.

    Their attention sharpens there—
    at the point where structure meets strain,
    where something held together
    might give way—
    a thumb pressed once
    at the weakened place.

    They have no questions—
    not how it was made,
    not why.

    They do not stay long enough
    to understand
    what it required to stand at all.

    Instead, they borrow from what surrounds them—
    picking up a word already spoken,
    wearing it as if their name were stitched inside,

    and hold it
    just long enough
    for the next voice
    to take its place.

    They wait
    for the world
    to hand them a reflection
    they can accept
    without question.

    And while they wait,

    they pull—

    at the edge,
    where the fabric thins,
    at the seam
    where threads begin to separate,

    at the place
    where something is most alive
    and therefore
    most vulnerable.

    It does not take long.

    What took time
    to imagine,
    to hold,
    to bring into form—

    can be undone
    in a moment—
    a shift,
    a break in tension—
    and it gives.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Agree Not to See


    Music wafting through the air
    or is that birds
    or Tinkerbell?
    I got some dust inside my eyes
    so it must be the fairy
    swooshing by.

    Marching bands
    with brass and bass
    kings and princesses
    take their place
    to tell the story—
    the same one again:
    a far away land
    a witch and a hand
    given in fanfare
    to a sashed, bare-faced man.

    There are rides to be
    taken
    heroes who capture
    and race
    down adrenaline-filled paths
    that feel like lov—
    no, rapture.

    Slow and then fast
    through dazzling light
    enough to fly past the
    machine in the back
    and the character
    smoking with his head
    hung on a rack—

    We agree not to see.

    Lights flicker
    gold and then blue
    wait—did he just look
    or did he look through?
    A pause in the motion
    something like timing
    I take as a cue.

    Confetti drifts
    ash, or snow
    touches my sleeve
    then lets me go
    I leave it there—
    a moment too long
    part of the set
    and now so am I

    —and who am I?

    I forget.

    Voices echo
    layered thin—
    his or theirs
    or somewhere between
    I turn to see
    then let it be what it was
    I could have sworn
    the words
    pointed to you.

    The track tilts—
    just slightly off
    enough to blame
    on atmosphere or thought
    I steady once
    then sit up again
    and see the path
    has gently bent

    not back
    not through—

    just near

    A mirror placed
    at child-height glass
    returns a face
    I almost pass
    until it lingers
    half a beat—

    more sure of you
    than it is of me

    A worker sweeps
    the same small spot
    back and forth
    as if it’s not
    already clean
    already done—

    I watch too long
    then call it one
    of those things
    that people repeat
    to keep the edges
    soft and the picture neat.

    A door marked STAFF
    stands open wide
    no one there
    but light inside.
    I look—

    then don’t—

    then walk beyond

    back into sound
    and colored air
    where something waits
    that isn’t there
    or isn’t mine—
    but knows my name
    well enough
    to feel the same

    The music swells—
    or something like it
    close enough
    that I don’t fight it
    I take my place
    without a claim

    and watch it start
    the same again.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Ranunculus


    They say it’s a flower.

    And it is.

    Set in a glass jar on the table,
    stems cut at an angle,
    water rising just past the leaves.

    Still—

    what is it, exactly,
    that keeps arranging itself
    in this particular way?

    Petal beside petal,
    all with backs arched, stretching,
    yawning in fullness of sound,
    breath released.

    I would like to ask it
    when the first layer
    became the second.

    Whether there was a moment
    of decision—

    or whether it was inevitable.

    Look closely:

    one curve gathers light,
    another releases it,
    a third holds both
    in histrionic embrace.

    If you turn the jar,
    the color shifts.

    Orange, certainly.
    Yellow, also.
    Something between them
    that lights a cigar in the backroom
    and waits for you to come to the door.

    It would be tempting to say
    the center contains the answer.

    But then—

    why does each outer layer
    have its own beginning, middle,
    and end?

    Why does nothing collapse
    once the inside appears?

    Perhaps the truth behaves
    like this.

    Not hidden, exactly.

    Distributed.

    You could begin anywhere.

    Here, for instance—
    with the outermost petal,
    thin as it is,
    still holding its place.

    Or here—
    closer in,
    where the folds tighten
    without strangling away
    the once upon a time.

    Or here—
    where the color deepens
    just enough
    to suggest another version.

    Each would be accurate.

    Each would leave something out.

    There must have been
    a first unfolding.

    A moment
    when one surface
    made room for another.

    Or perhaps
    they arrived together,
    agreeing in advance
    to share the same space.

    A ranunculus is no children's book.

    Layer beside layer,
    each one present
    at the same time.

    And we,
    standing at the table,

    decide where to look first.

    — Iris Lennox