There Was a Door by Leatha Kendrick

 

“There Was a Door” by Leatha Kendrick

 

There was a door and her hand
on its lever. In too many clothes –
her coat’s wide cape collar,
her high button shoes, a bonnet
heavy and huge whose beruffled
lining frames a thin face.             Enough to smother a watcher.

For more than a century
she’s stood, not going through.
Was she leaving or coming home?
Time has carried her cheekbones
into our Susie. Susie running
morning and evening,
as soon as she stood up to walk, she was
running.                             I cannot imagine her

stopped so long in a doorway
in a browned bonnet, feet stilled
and buttoned, though the lattice
my grandmother stands at is the same
lattice on Susie’s gate in Virginia.
Who made this photo? Maybe the door
isn’t a door, though the ground’s gritted
as if she were leaving                             a garden.

What do I have to say today?
            Only Oh and Oh and Oh
let me cross my own boundary
            open the door –

or shut it if that’s what it takes
to keep the dark out a while.
            Only a while, long enough

to open light’s letter, to read
the familial hand that is my hand
open to draw me into the courtyard
            out to the road.

There was a door to the river
I never lived beside – a door
on its changing shoreline, its shining.
            My hand on the lever.

 

 

____________________

Share your response to this work, in any form, here

 

 

Leatha Kendrick Artist Statement:

Leatha Kendrick is the author of four books of poetry, the latest, Almanac of the
Invisible, from Larkspur Press. Her essays, poems and fiction appear widely in journals
and anthologies, including The Baltimore Review, The Southern Womens Review, The
Southern Poetry Anthology, Volume III; What Comes Down to Us TwentyFive
Contemporary Kentucky Poets; and I to I: Life Writing by Kentucky Feminists.
Recipient of two Al Smith Fellowships in poetry, she was honored in 2013 by the Kentucky
Foundation for Women with the Sallie Bingham Award. She leads workshops at the
Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning in Lexington, Kentucky.

 

Author: A Room of Her Own

Share This Post On