Issue 92

Green Walnut

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I heard the impact
in the sodden ground
and was afraid
I was not alone in the night.
And then I wished I, alone,
had heard something fantastic,
black bear dislodging nests
in high-crowned trees
or the thwack
on trunk by antlers
that promises more deer.
I was awake with what
I’d never see,
curled in the pericarp
of sleigh bed and duvet.
In the morning a spill
of green walnuts
snapped and dropped
overnight. From Juglans,
a tree named for Jupiter,
those logged, hefty
ovates giving off
bright citrus spice
but the vivid green
is yielding--scale
softening the globe.
Unintended fruit.
Do not consume.
What I hold is unripe.











Kelleen Zubick's poetry has appeared in a number of journals including Agni Online, Barrow Street, december, Dogwood, the Kenyon Review, the Mississippi Review, and Willow Springs. She received an MFA in Creative Writing from Arizona State University and has been awarded artist residencies from the Anderson Center and from the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. Kelleen lives in North Carolina and works for the national No Kid Hungry campaign.
Author Kelleen Zubick, a woman with brown hair and glasses, smiles widely against a backdrop of a tree
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