To the student who introduced me to Philip Glass:

Katrina Kaye

There must have been more to you.

A strength kept far
below your commonplace skin;

a philosophy found
in the keys of grand piano.

Perhaps I never noticed it
because it was in your hands,

the clean nails and posed
fingers of a pianist.

I was looking at a face
too eager to avoid my glance.

Maybe you didn’t play at all and
that secret was resting beside ear drum

and closed eyes as you followed
the notes with nodding head.

But oh,
how the staccato pierced me,
repetition and awakening,

The familiar and the cloaked
taking turns at who leads the dance.

The known or unknown, sage or novice,
Teacher becomes student and student-teacher.

Of all I have learned from doing
nothing more than listening,

this lesson is one of the sweetest.

“To the student who introduced me to Philip Glass:” is previously published in Verse Vital (2023).

Iphigenia

Katrina Kaye

I am your sacrifice,
the daughter whose blood can gift you home.

A unwinding of fate,

another snipped thread,
not quite golden.

You promised me a warrior’s bed
but delivered only spilt blood, knife to throat.

Your most sacred of lambs.

It is easy to give up what you never wanted;
what you never saw as your own.

I was your daughter,
I was not born merely to burn.
I hatched to spread wings.

Did you always see me as just another pawn,

a toy,

a golden coin,

not even your most precious?

My death secured your travel,
your destination now foreseeable,
but not what greets you upon your home shore.

I am helpless to your maneuvers above high waters,

but my mother is not so forgiving

and she waits,

axe in hand.