Last modified: February 7, 2026
Phoebe Literature| February 15, 2026| Poetry, Print Issues
In vain, I wore this flesh as a mistake, bred so
proper by this derelict age. Oh, despise do I
the decorum of being crossed: be meek, forgive
easily–what of the girls whose feet are webbed
as geese, who mark in filthy toes their territory?
Does my vengeance possess the allure of belly
dance, shall I be the first to teach you that to be
agreeable is a death sentence? If you ache for
doors, find a spread of guillotines instead. If you
long for a portal, savor the vinegar in your bread.
I confess I am sick of it: how those who swing a
blade so recklessly are the last to taste it and how
yours still burrows as sorrow in my throat. Akin
to God, my voice must transmute through livery;
through the study of disparate things. Nettle, so
sly in its sting, rubs you red as I do in my lapping.
Place the burn to your ear like a shell from the sea:
inside, a forked tongue cry: come get me, I’m ready.
Kale Hensley is a poet and visual artist from West Virginia. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Gulf Coast, Booth, Evergreen Review, and Sonora Review. She lives in Texas with her wife and a menagerie of clingy pets. Find more of her writing at kalehens.com.
Last modified: February 7, 2026
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