 Isabelle Shepherd is currently an undergraduate at West Virginia University. Shepherd will graduate in Spring, 2014 with dual degrees in English and Political Science. Her poems have been published in venues such as Plain Spoke and Backbone Mountain Review. Shepherd intends to continue the study of poetry at whatever MFA program graciously accepts her.
Isabelle Shepherd is currently an undergraduate at West Virginia University. Shepherd will graduate in Spring, 2014 with dual degrees in English and Political Science. Her poems have been published in venues such as Plain Spoke and Backbone Mountain Review. Shepherd intends to continue the study of poetry at whatever MFA program graciously accepts her. ---------
Collecting Butterflies 
  On my ninth birthday, our landlord gave me The Field Guide  
to Butterflies, a worn copy I read by flashlight, 
beneath the blankets, beside the bed 
my mother sometimes shared with him. I knew 
them by name. Pieris virginiensis left chalk-white dust 
on my fingertips. The landlord taught me to lure them 
with sugar offered on upheld palms. 
 Shadowboxes waited for milkweed to bleed 
white, ready for the monarch’s unfolding. 
I pinned one down, needle through thorax, 
quieting the writhing of its thick abdomen until I 
could spread its gilded wings.  
 A Weekend at Your One Bedroom Family Cabin in Braxton Co., WV 
  I. 
  When I met your father, I saw your eyes. 
I wanted to kiss them when he looked at me. 
II. 
  You know the neighbors 
live without running water 
because you broke into their barn-house 
one night two years ago 
with your brother after the fire 
died down and the beer was gone. 
 We’d do it again tonight, but they’re home. 
  III. 
Hunters in neon whistle at beagles; 
they remind you of your grandfather. 
  IV. 
  The last person who lifted me onto his shoulders 
was my mother’s boyfriend in ’99. 
I think he wanted me to know what floating felt like. 
You’re not even shaking, hands gripping 
my thighs. The thrill is better than the view 
into the one room schoolhouse. 
  V. 
  In the stream, you used to capture crawdads. 
I built a dam every time it rained. 
 It surprises you that I know 
what a snake feels like: the sleeves of those leather jackets 
you run your fingers down in stores 
without picking up because you’re scared 
to see how much they cost. 
 The water in the creek will ice over 
lightly soon. Only children will skate 
without breaking through.
 
VI.
 
  You take me into town, 
where we buy two bottles 
of Coca-Cola, because things just taste better 
with lips pursed for a kiss. 
“Blow.” 
This is a musical project about the resonance of closed-end air columns, 
narrow necks that sing.
 
  VII. 
Back at the cabin, you add whiskey 
to cans of Coke and steal 
one of your dead grandfather’s pipes. 
  I’d forgotten how to stoke a fire.  
 
  VIII.
 
  And though we shared the bed upstairs, 
we couldn’t fuck, but we could see the stars 
for the first time in months. 
  Such a Selfish Thing, or My Father’s Memorial Service 
This is not about my father.
When I walked in, a woman asked how I knew the deceased, and I had to explain. I downed a glass of wine with one of my mother’s Xanax in the hallway immediately after.
My grandfather, the night’s party planner, sat in a chair eating tiny sandwiches, stroking the underbelly of an aged lion.
The party favors: gift bags of my father’s ashes, velvet ribbon closure. The guests tossed them like confetti; one rimmed her glass with it, like salt.
When I walked in, a woman asked how I knew the deceased, and I had to explain. I downed a glass of wine with one of my mother’s Xanax in the hallway immediately after.
My grandfather, the night’s party planner, sat in a chair eating tiny sandwiches, stroking the underbelly of an aged lion.
The party favors: gift bags of my father’s ashes, velvet ribbon closure. The guests tossed them like confetti; one rimmed her glass with it, like salt.
Besides family, the only man who had known my father couldn’t talk—face bent inward; his two sons sat apart in the back room, understood when I escaped to the bath and turned off the lights.
Everyone else walked around, looked at his art, said, He must have been so clean, orderly. A solid worker. He never had a job. His house was a fire hazard.
When it came my turn to stand and pay my dues, I sprinkled poppies down my arms and lit them all to flames.
