Almanac Poetry: Venticelli

 

Wind from the Sea, by Andrew Wyeth, tempera on hardboard, 1947. National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. [Wikimedia Commons.]

 

Venticelli

 

They enter through spaces
under doors,
sneak between slatted air-vents,
high on walls,
come in when windows
are left ajar,
these little winds.

 

 

(Acknowledgement: first published in Please Feed the Macaws…I’m Feeling Too Indolent, Ginninderra Press, 2023)

 

 

Read more from Kevin Densley  HERE

 

Kevin Densley’s latest poetry collection, Please Feed the Macaws…I’m Feeling Too Indolent, is available HERE

 

Read more Almanac Poetry HERE

 

 

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About

Kevin Densley is a graduate of both Deakin University and The University of Melbourne. He has taught writing and literature in numerous Victorian universities and TAFES. He is a poet and writer-in-general. His sixth book-length poetry collection, Isle Full of Noises, was published in early 2026 by Ginninderra Press. He is also the co-author of ten play collections for young people, as well as a multi Green Room Award nominated play, Last Chance Gas, published by Currency Press. Other writing includes screenplays for educational films.

Comments

  1. Karl Dubravs Karl Dubravs says

    Your poem took me back to late 1989 – living in Townsville, sitting in the front room of a Queenslander, strumming my guitar and seeking inspiration for a song….

    ‘The breeze slipped through the window
    the curtain wrapped around the ghost…..’

  2. Kevin Densley says

    Cheers, Karl. I appreciated your comment and enjoyed the accompanying (and highly apt) lyrical snippet.

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