Elaine Kahn: Pick of the Week [ed. Terence Winch]

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The Good News about Hell

Suburbs are the perfect

habitat for deer. Jesus said

they make the dumb

tongues of men sing.

Their antlers branch

until the leaves fall off

and earth gives up

its privates. I’ve heard that

to reach enlightenment,

all you have to do is touch the earth.

God as lakes.

I’m waiting for the storm to end

in a Styrofoam grotto

at the catholic church on Tower Road.

For some reason, god

has imprinted us with a desire

that’s awakened within 

cave-like structures. I once held

an injured bat: Intimacy

is sharing something private.

Saint Jeremiah complained,

but only after being ridiculed

for an entire day.

Dante and Virgil walked

through rain to touch the future.

My cats hide in the closet

to avoid the vacuum.

An exit does exist, 

but the ocean is more knowable

than what comes next. I focus

on the sound of water. All my friends

are waiting for me

to slip, laments Saint Jeremiah. No wonder

he was so ashamed 

of what he saw. Neon

loosening the night. Like every reason

is an un-reason. Like heaven is

whatever

death that lasts

forever. Do you know

the love that eats?

The love you eat from.

It burns through you

like the lord himself.

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Elaine Kahn is the author of Romance or The End (Soft Skull, 2020) and Women in Public (City Lights, 2015). She lives in Los Angeles and teaches at the Poetry Field School. [This poem originally appeared in Fence, Spring 2024.]

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Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904)  Dante and Virgil in Hell  oil on canvas.                                                    Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824-1904), Dante and Virgil in Hell, oil on canvas.