TO A GIRL WAITING FOR A BUS
It will never last,
anything said
to the frozen ground,
though you hover
and hold in and hush
your mortal warmth
and nurse every frigid thought
as though it might die
without you.
A child’s thought,
that. The sky
in its lacerated swath
of light was once an idea
of forever,
a template for the end.
Just as the stars
gleamed cheaply
in the radio’s blue
blue firmament, a song
pretended to speak
to anyone
about anything. There you stood
as though there you’d spilled
and it began
where you were soft, wherever—
in the subterranean root
of each blind tooth,
in the salt-sewn creases
behind your locked knees,
it began,
the pain or a song,
it made no difference then,
it began
lightly, like snow,
to blot the abiding air
of everything you might hope
to leave behind.
3 comments:
I feel like this little girl waiting for a bus a lot of the time. ;-)
nice evocation
I like this poem very much. You should consider sending in a few pieces for Gabriel Gudding's Strange Call.
a lovely, elegant poem
that will last.
ra
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