SAMANTHA TERRELL - POET / EIC, SHINE Poetry Series
  • ABOUT
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • CONNECT
  • SHOP
  • PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
  • POETIC TRINITAS
  • SHINE Poetry Series

Dec.16~ BELLA MELARDI

12/16/2025

 
Poetry fans, this week at SHINE we're diverting a bit from our regular poetic routine -- yesterday with a Christmas-themed feature by a trio of writers; today, with prose poetry, "Moon Water" by university student Bella Melardi; and tomorrow, with one final Spotlight for the year -- a sample of new poetry by Luigi Coppola, whose excellent book Even God Gets Distracted Sometimes (Broken Sleep Books) is in the line-up of collections to be featured in January. I simply can't wait! Until then, have a safe and pleasant season, and thank you, Bella, for thinking of SHINE as a home for your words! Here's Moon Water...

Moon Water

When I was little, I used to stare at the moon from my bedroom window and wonder if it ever resented the Earth’s admiration of the sun. Did it envy that brightness? Did it ever feel like a substitute, glowing only because of borrowed light? My father used to visit every other weekend. Routinely asking about school like he was clocking in for a shift. Covering my mom’s shift. I think he felt like the moon. That when the sun set, we were left with disappointment.

But my father had a power over me that my mother never could. His greatest influence was his absence. When he left, the space he left behind grew large enough to raise me. I became an ocean without a moon—wild, rising, uncontrollable. I learned to rise and crash without warning. His absence pulled at my tides, leaving a lump in my throat that only grew. Later, doctors called it a thyroid nodule. I just thought of it as the physical proof that I was always on the brink of tears. I called it the body’s way of storing an unanswered question.

Water rose in the back of my retina, causing it to swell. A slow flooding that blurred the edges of everything. When I lost an eye, I lost the ability to see the grey in reality. Depth and nuance became a rumour. My black and white thinking, an act of survival.
​

I feel guilty about the way men have power over me. It led me to fear masculinity. Especially in myself. I performed femininity. A fluoride forced across my teeth. A purifier. But I couldn’t stick to the routine. Tight shirts. Short skirts. Makeup. Full face. Eventually, my entrails had to exhale. ​
Picture
Bella Melardi is a poet and an author who writes about the political and the personal. She attends Ontario College of Art & Design.


Comments are closed.

    SHINE - International Poetry Series

    Picture
    Click here for submissions and more
    From the international poetry community, we have a "luxury of stars," as Sylvia Plath might say, and it is SHINE's honor to provide a home for their words with the online Spotlight series as well as SHINE Quarterly. Click on the logo above to learn more. And...keep writing, keep shining!
    In poetry,
    Samantha Terrell, EIC
    SYLVIA PLATH
    Stars Over the Dordogne

    Stars are dropping thick as stones into the twiggy
    Picket of trees whose silhouette is darker
    Than the dark of the sky because it is quite starless.
    The woods are a well. The stars drop silently.
    They seem large, yet they drop, and no gap is visible.
    Nor do they send up fires where they fall
    Or any signal of distress or anxiousness.
    They are eaten immediately by the pines.

    Where I am at home, only the sparsest stars
    Arrive at twilight, and then after some effort.
    And they are wan, dulled by much travelling.
    The smaller and more timid never arrive at all
    But stay, sitting far out, in their own dust.
    They are orphans. I cannot see them. They are lost.
    But tonight they have discovered this river with no trouble,
    They are scrubbed and self-assured as the great planets.

    The Big Dipper is my only familiar.
    I miss Orion and Cassiopeia's Chair. Maybe they are
    Hanging shyly under the studded horizon
    Like a child's too-simple mathematical problem.
    Infinite number seems to be the issue up there.
    Or else they are present, and their disguise so bright
    I am overlooking them by looking too hard.
    Perhaps it is the season that is not right.

    And what if the sky here is no different,
    And it is my eyes that have been sharpening themselves?
    Such a luxury of stars would embarrass me.
    The few I am used to are plain and durable;
    I think they would not wish for this dressy backcloth
    Or much company, or the mildness of the south.
    They are too puritan and solitary for that--
    When one of them falls it leaves a space,

    A sense of absence in its old shining place.
    And where I lie now, back to my own dark star,
    I see those constellations in my head,
    Unwarmed by the sweet air of this peach orchard.
    There is too much ease here; these stars treat me too well.
    On this hill, with its view of lit castles, each swung bell
    Is accounting for its cow. I shut my eyes
    And drink the small night chill like news of home.

    ~~~

    Previous Features

    February 2026
    January 2026
    December 2025
    November 2025
    October 2025
    September 2025
    August 2025
    July 2025
    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • ABOUT
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • CONNECT
  • SHOP
  • PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
  • POETIC TRINITAS
  • SHINE Poetry Series