Appetite
by Keli Osborn
Until I gave up sharp cheeses
and crimson wine from the bottom
of a green bottle, I didn’t know
what I wanted. When the doctor
took away biscuits, I freely smeared
soft butter on my calloused feet.
An allergist blacklisted durum,
and I built spaghetti birdcages
for all of my gluttonous friends.
When a healer asked me to bypass
almonds and sunflower seeds,
I buried granola beneath the roses.
How I miss the air of whipped cream,
sweet tang and drizzle of balsamic.
Packing forbidden scrambled eggs
around crystal and silver, I ship
longing and soup spoons to a future
in which the costliest shawls remain
those woven from the fine beard hairs
of wild ibex. Silence hugging
my shoulders is more than absence
of sound, cravings other than want.
I think it was John Cage who muted
instruments for a four-minute piece:
strings and winds, black and white keys,
all stilled. I might hear a world in quiet,
surrender desire to sated composition—
set a place at the table for this abundance.
Keli Osborn lives in Eugene, Oregon. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Verseweavers, Allegro, KYSO Flash, and Dona Nobis Pacem—an anthology from the Lane Literary Guild. Formerly a newspaper reporter, manager in local government and university instructor, Keli recently has explored the Italian language, belly dancing and comedy improv.