Milton J. Kessler Memorial Prize in Poetry
– Finalist –

             like Orpheus, led you    ::    like Orpheus, turned on you 

I dreamed so long of relaunching, 

body a life line, traced again—how hard  

could it be? We go forward, limn grooves, 

don’t we, every day in our anticipations  

climb, pull in backdrops and scenery  

so real we speak actual words  

to the faces we find up here. Shadowy 

half-seen. We are so used to want blowing us 

gently over each moment’s lip, leaning our 

eyes toward to be, we hardly notice the pall 

straight ahead’s always strung between us. 

Your fading voice, scent—follow, up this hill— 

like some song I heard my way to 

when I found you: forward,  

again, looking fully 

toward the life of ours  

I was leading 

I’m still losing 

you into 


To see your face. The first time. 

A kaleidoscope rolled—

so many could be’s 

settling there  

all the same structure  

and detail, hollow-etched 

as yours. how it everpulls. Pulse. 

Heavier than haunting. Closer to 

promise gathering quiet in those soft rooms. 

The corners of your eye. Fragments of future. 

Flung. your face illuminated. your face. Open 

Rein. Bare-skinned. Sung out. Uncovered 

and waiting behind, begging me 

looking forward 

to look back 

pulling me

to follow your lead, back: 

the only form of  

you I can keep

Ali Beheler’s work can be found in Tupelo Quarterly, ballast journal, Spoon River Poetry Review, Up the Staircase Quarterly, Willows Wept Review, and elsewhere. Her work has won the SRPR Editor’s Prize (2024) and honorable mention in the Rash Poetry Awards (2024). She attended The Kenyon Review’s juried Online Summer Writer’s Workshop in Poetry (2023) and was a writer-in-residence at Dorland Mountain Arts Colony (2022 & 2023). She teaches at Hastings College in Hastings, NE. Find her at www.alibeheler.com.