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11-10-2025

 

Hollay Ghadery

​​

REBELLION BOX


Ask your husband about the honey bees. I suspect I may

have an affinity for things that drone and drown

out. On the way here everything was so green it hurt,

the trees practically threw themselves on the road -

and to think, only days ago  I’d been worried about

my nose most of all. Now, John’s been hung and the rest

 

of us sit dumb and cut away at stove wood. No rest

for the foolish. You see, some of us here may

have stepped into battle thinking only about

valour, liberty – winning. It’s easy enough to drown

yourself in these abstracts. It’s a dangerous road

to follow. To think! We remarkable things are hurt

 

so easily. Tell Mary I think of her often and hurt

when I think of myself like this – all stone and soot. Rest

assured my present circumstance is not finite.  Every road

leads home. It’s true, our troops sat in that tavern and may

have felt some degree of foreboding already. We drown

ourselves in glass. I know I was afraid to think about 

 

Mary. Home. Honey bees and my broken nose, about

to fall off my face. Such want of attention. I hurt

the most remarkable people. God, Mary. I will drown

my primitive conditions.  I’ll manage to create. I’ll rest

in earth swells, write in indelible ink. I know I may

be the most pressing of hopeless things, because road

 

after road and I still brandish youth like a shotgun. Road

after road leads to finding something to do about

all this time on my hands. So I dovetail my work. I may

be the most diligent of craftsmen. All this time can hurt,

weigh black and blue in the middle of my face, the rest

—the luxury of a blue cotton dress—the rest can drown,

 

like marzipan creek pebbles, July’s sweetgrass chew. Drown[1] ,

and wait, because all that talk and rallying - it cleared a road.

I won’t stand for futility. There are so many reasons to rest

your beliefs here, and not one of us has. I write home about

paying debts on time, mending the fence. I write to avoid hurt,

boredom - being forgotten. I write you about the bees.  You may

 

remember the summer we cleared your husband’s land. May

came hard and the bees came early. I was stung twice. It hurt,

but Mary was in blue, and it was something else to think about.

POSTCARD, SANTA MARIA

1.

 

Across the pool

the boy’s plum-

dark eyes gulp 

refracted light 

all over the girl 

beside me. 

Stretched
to indifference

 

her thighs are 

perfectly fattened 

calves, flicking 

flies; their frisson 

of velvet shimmers

 

made slow 

by this 

drugged heat. 

Made soft.

 

2.

 

I’m not that girl 

anymore. I

have the
conviction 

of dust and

 

the cervix 

of a fifteen-year-old, 

my doctor says. 

Not bad

for four kids

 

so I believe
in anything
so I can 

believe 

at all. 
 

3. 

 

The boy is coming 

snake sway

in his hips, a

roving satellite over
breast and
breath, and brown. 

His

air-

compressed confidence
warps the children’s 

laughter

 

baffles the sun
so even the girl
looks up.


4. 

 

I’m not that girl 

anymore—
her curling toes, 

her eyes


impossible beyond 

shades, her weight 

inside me, shifting 

my embarrassment 

of cliches 

scattered 

like nail clippings.


IT WON’T STOP, BUT IT WILL BE DIVIDED INTO FOUR STAGES

 

Deny it. Then make a link between Count

Dracula, a 15th-century Wallachian voevode

named Vlad and someone

 

                          who doesn’t love you back.

Grieve. Then deny it. There’s brutality in

speculation—Dracula hunched over heaving

cleavage. Vlad issuing orders, twenty-thousand

Turkish women, children, and men impaled.

Someone saying, 

 

                             No, I don’t smoke anymore.

Acknowledge tendency. It’s vicious, it’s closer.

Can’t say for sure Vlad inspired Dracula but he did

flay, cannibalize, and bury people alive. Bodies

scattered over kilometres of vacant land. Brutal,

like someone stepping out onto the street with 

someone else,

 

                         lighting up.

 

Accept it. Not all accounts of Vlad portray him as

psychopathic. In parts of Romania, he’s a hero. Others

lump him into the same category as Ivan the Terrible and

Genghis  Khan, his tyrannical behaviour more or less

standard for the time. More or less 

 

                         a better-looking version of yourself.

They’re on the street laughing  and it’s more or less 

                          ruthless

 

but it won’t stop. You will be divided.

​​​

-from Rebellion Box, celebrated with the author's permission and selected by PoemoftheWeek.com Founder and Editor, Andrew McFadyen-Ketchum

​​

Hollay Ghadery is an award-winning Iranian-Canadian multi-genre writer living in rural Ontario on Anishinaabe land. Fuse, her acclaimed memoir of mixed-race identity and mental illness, was published by Guernica Editions’ MiroLand imprint in 2021 and won the 2023 Canadian Bookclub Award for Nonfiction/Memoir. Her debut collection of poetry, Rebellion Box, was released with Radiant Press in April 2023. Hollay's short-fiction collection, Widow Fantasies, was released by Gordon Hill Press in 2024. Her chapbook, the leaves of grass are dreaming, was released in November 2025 with Anstruther Press. In February 2026, her debut novel, The Unravelling of Ouwill be published by Palimpsest Press. Hollay is a board member of the League of Canadian Poets, the co-chair of the League's BIPOC committee, as well as the Poet Laureate of the region in which she lives, and a host on The New Books Network. Hollay is also a host of HOWL—the literary arts show—on 89.5 CIUT FM, a member of The Writers Union of Canada, the Creative Nonfiction Collective, and the National Book Critics Circle.

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