Weekly Feature: Poetry at The Arts Fuse

 

Welcome to “Poetry at The Arts Fuse.” A new poem every Thursday

 

THE FOURTH COTTAGE

 

                  “Without clothing, covered only in mud and the blood of herself and  others [Ita Siraż, a young woman of nineteen] sought help. She visited one cottage and was turned away, and then a second, and then a third. In the fourth cottage she found help, and she survived.

“Who lives in the fourth cottage?”

                                                                       p. 298, Black Earth, Timothy Snyder

 

This reads like a folk tale,

but in a folk tale there are three

only, and an old woman

with magical powers

who fosters the forlorn maiden

and fends off wicked oppressors

until she marries a prince.

 

From her Lithuanian ditch

she rose to the surface. This reads

like a ghost story, but in a ghost story

the undead returns

to terrorize the neighborhood

until woodcutters in the cottages

drive a stake through her heart.

 

This reads like a folk tale

or a ghost story, except

for that fourth cottage at the end

of the village. And so, dear reader,

This is a blessing and a prayer.

 

May you always make your home

in the fourth cottage.

 

J. Kates, a minor poet and a literary translator, has been granted three National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships and an Individual Artist Fellowship from the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts. He has published three chapbooks of his own poems and two full books, The Briar Patch (Hobblebush Books) and Places of Permanent Shade (Accents). The translator of a dozen books of Russian and French poetry, he has edited two anthologies of Russian translations. A former president of the American Literary Translators Association, and a co-diretor of Zephyr Press, he is also the co-translator of seven books of Latin American and Spanish poetry.

 

Note: Hey poets! We seek submissions of excellent poetry from across the length and breadth of contemporary poetics. See submission guidelines here. The arbiter of the feature is the magazine’s poetry editor, John Mulrooney.

— Arts Fuse editor Bill Marx

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