Once after a brunch of needles, pastry brown blood
Stains and fennel, you brandished
The length of hair at the caller knocking at the door,
Mocking birds scrabbling to fill
Up the morning with noise. Once after a breaking
Of limbs you leaned from the broken
Car window and pawed at the ground around my feet
Like a dog after a crime.
Once after the rain came to you like a blanket
Of clover, like a shawl of empty
Shoulders, you proclaimed that the future of wood
Was an axe. We embellished
Your waxing fever with polish and the electric
Wood sander for Christmas. Then
Once you learned to walk again, the lengths of tendon
Reworked into banisters of clean light
You stole a thimble of milk and every other tick
Of seconds from the clock. The refrigerator
Heaved a stony thrumming, compressing air
In gasps. One floor tile at a time
From the alternating patterns of worn browning cream
And burgundy scuffs, got up and marched
To the basement in regiments. Once you parted
The gift of a mirror into two rooms at once
The devil rang the door bell and you scuttled. Once
In a romance of broken rocks and asphalt
You went after the redness in a robin with the left over
Steak knives shivering in the drawer.
4 comments:
"like a dog after a crime" ... "the future of wood was an axe" ...
Woah. Love that.
Your poems oft seem to start with a meal. Interesting the way you twist the ingestion of things.
Yes, a meal. We are afraid to dine with you, what with all the knives. Also, we have heard that you are not above eating something that was labeled "hot brown." Perhaps you could give us a recipe for your next entry.
Love the supreme being of Popular Ink
You don't have a bio on this site. I see that many of the contributors excel in interpretive dance. I bet you are good at that. Would love to see you bio.
Post a Comment