Wind Chimes in North America
By MistakenMagic
- 9907 reads
This warm rain draws out the bittersweet smell
of nettles and wild onion clustered on the riverbanks.
The sweating cobbles are slick and smooth
under my sandals; one step in every ten I skid
and a breath freezes in my throat -
but the fall never quite arrives. I keep walking.
*
For the few weeks that straddled winter and spring
I forgot what it is to think - had to learn again
what it is to be human. I became so aware of the world
that I could hear echoes of places I have never been;
the con brio clinks of wind chimes made from broken bottles,
swinging on a wooden porch somewhere in North America,
and the dum-thwack dum-thwack heartbeat
of a tennis court in the south of England.
*
Prayers return to my lips like a reluctant lover.
Now I talk to God the way one talks to a coma patient;
the sceptic in you says they are deaf to every word,
but another part, somehow older than yourself,
tells you your prayers come through as colours in their dreams.
*
Last night I lay awake; the rain crackling
on the gazebo outside my window sounded
like fireworks and the moon rolled back
into the sky like a watery eye in its socket.
I thought of you. The next morning the sun
rubbed against my windowpanes the way a cat
coming in from the cold brushes a trousered leg,
and my dreams had left you-shaped creases in the bed.
*
There is a chattering and clacking of coat hangers
as I clear my wardrobe and once again pack my life
into boxes. Samantha comes to say goodbye -
we end up curled like cubs on my naked mattress,
nestled under her knitted poncho. I grasp her hand,
and cry - for all the things I'm afraid of
and everything she'll never know.
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Comments
Wow, Magic - no wonder this
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new MistakenMagic Hi! Lovely
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Well I think you've beat
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poem of the week and fully
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This poem oozes quality, and
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I'm so sorry I'm so late
k.
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I've came back to this poem,
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um wow. just wow. "Now I
ddf
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