Poetry by Casey Mills
On Mountaintops, Thundering
I will say this
you caffeine-soaked
accomplishment junkies:
Hear me!
You rave around my head
like ravenous wasps
demanding I beat this body
aching with fatigue
Get up!
Work harder!
This abuser,
now working from within
On mountaintops, thundering
I beat my chest
and say to you, Begone!
for I have turned to the Lord
no longer ashamed
of basking in His face
when He sees fit
to turn it towards me
be it a sunny day
or the miracle presence
of the saints I love:
Begone, I say!
Let your incessant busy
pass by like false fire
for now I rest
in glory, and glory, and glory
The Pew
I asked the quiet couple from out of town
if I could sit beside them in the pews
after some confusion about where to move
a box of tissues, they slid over and
I felt the warmth they left behind
and remembered other ways we feel
warmth: a coin given from a hip pocket
a coat you didn’t ask for but needed
suddenly placed around your shoulders
a palm holding your cheek
and considered the way this warmth travels
across years, and this is why
some places feel like holy buttered toast
like this pew, warmed by a quiet couple
and all the other saints that came before them
Casey Mills writes poems early in the morning while his kids sleep and the birds wake. He lives in Northern California by a creek he spends a lot of time with. His poetry has been published in Heart of Flesh, Amethyst Review, Ekstasis, and Solid Food Press.