Poetry: “Leaves in the Moon,” by C.L. O’Dell

April 17, 2009 at 1:11 pm

Light unfolds itself
in the dark of your veins,
in the deserted
cold of midnight

when my eyelids
jig for fish,
where skin separates
the fragile seasons.

I am asleep,
curled-up with the spiders
and a strange scent
of mold.

You’re a wet leaf hanging
in the thin belly of the moon;
I reach for the door to grab your hair
by the invisibility of it.

A sink full of applauding glass and metal
rolls my shoulder,
a dog’s rib-cage wedged
between my legs.

A flock of birds
move like thought
in the breaks of your voice,
prancing through my temple –

a shotgun blast of pellets
floating to the surface of a pond.

I moan and smear my forehead, a dying flower,
reaching for a dark hole,

wishing that you would
come and dream with me.

Entry filed under: Poetry. Tags: .

Fiction: “Prometheus” by James Henschen Poetry: “To Virginia Woolf,” by Paulette Guerin


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