The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Lawrence Wray
Pebble Twig Grass Feather
vowels—an archaic incantation, the thing itself lifting its earthen shade, the body comes, hers and mine, and one other of first things she sounds out, turning them over and over—Pebble Twig shapes us, utters and shapes us, then and then. Not one without puts them in my hand to wonder at, struck by that isishness prayers cleave She borrows the sounds and returns the breath one by one. A blackish taste of sweet dirt. Bees crisscross the succulent flesh that opened There is always by then another near to hand—not solely her, and now my shadow quails like leaves at her heels. But hungry, One that in the sunlight comes, mere, and carries the future of speech. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |