“Sensualist,” by Connie Voisine
Poetry faculty member Connie Voisine was recently featured in the LEON Literary Review. Read an excerpt of “Sensualist” below:
Sensualist
Just like Saint Julian, you met a handsome stag in the forest
who told that you would kill someone, that you might wake
to bloodied hands, mud on your shoes, unsure
of what has been dream and what is memory.
A whole family gone—off a cliff, shot in the kitchen,
children, etc. The mother is often the one who’s
found dragging her dying self towards a phone, a knife,
a son who may be the shooter, or it was another
troubled one. A lover caught in a bed, a neighbor stumbled
into wreckage, attempted heroism, foster children
too, dead. S/he/they would not have done this horrible
thing and I would like to think I would not have
become the time bomb we often discuss and ticking…
Read the rest of this poem, as well as an additional poem by Voisine, here: http://leonliteraryreview.com/issue-8-connie-voisine/