PHYLLODES REVERIES

By

“PHYLLODES REVERIES” by Rebecca Hawkes is the winner of the 2024 Sappho Prize for Women Poets, selected by Megan Fernandes. We’re honored to share this sensational poem with you.

“I am startled by the generous way the speaker views her own mortality, surgically cut open by herself in a dream, feeling the ‘lymphatic fruit’ and ‘lonesome egg’ of what ails the body. The body grows more than tumors, but is packed with dirt and seeds, volcano hands, deciduous hair. The poet makes death a rebirth and rebirth into something filmic, erotic, and verdant.” —Megan Fernandes, Guest Judge


———I.
In the dream the doctors let me
perform the surgery myself. I doubled

my chin, peered down at skin that opened
to the scalpel without bleeding. The picture

blurred. Bad watercolour. Ferny murk, unfurling.
Arteries illumed the ultrasound to feed

a tumour named for leaves. Lymphatic fruit.
What was it I lifted from myself? Smooth stone

pearl-firm, luminous like a pigeon’s lone-
some egg. I closed my fist around its warmth

and woke. Which experts now will tell me
whether the node hardened inside my breast

may hold some long-neglected itch
or else a new wet-feathered form of life?

The chipping of its beak
a measure of my heartbeat.

———II.
Nobody wants to be a nature poet.
I get it. Sometimes it can be hard to love

the grass. Pasture blades make my legs itch. Pollen
plugs the sinuses. My aging body is of little interest

to the ants. Woodpeckers ignore me in their diligence.
So much for all those years outdoors, ensorcelled

with my wand of herbicide. Heirloom toxins
spraying rainbows downwind through the meadows

of my days. My motorcycle’s thrum as much the music
as bees in the embattled thistledown, the wild

stonefruits erupting from mouthed cores
tossed to the underbrush. Below the overalls,

wrists daubed with nectar, petrol, poison. Lonely
with weeds, I rested in the shade of wilding pines

gathering dark needles in my boots. Waiting
on the biopsy, I set down roots from my bare feet.

And while I write, the smallest fly
parts fine lashes to taste the water from my eyes.

———III.
They still make scalpels from obsidian. Pray
for a steady handed volcano. Under black glass

I’ll peach-cleave, loose my stone. The budded plumule
hidden in the pit. This is the first year I’ve been born

in summer. I’d turn my dark hair red before
I let it fall. How else could I be this deciduous?

———IV.
Eventually when I die of whatever, everyone
I’ve liked will have to live double forever.

———V.
My love and I watch birds under the bridge
building their solstice nests from clay and spit.

We have invented a whole new way to kiss.
It is the same. It’s new because it’s now.

My singing mouth is packed with dirt
and seeds. I build a house of these and blow it down.


Rebecca Hawkes