Ah, poems from when I was in my teens and twenties. Some are not bad; it’s always a little embarrassing to look back at things I thought were SO GREAT and realize that they’re okay but not THE GREATEST THING EVER. The confidence of youth.
At Home In The Body
Resident of a half-vacant flat
I watch the mirror for signs
Of use: who to let in, what
To see. The postal label peels.
I can’t quite read the letters.
Smoother corners than my room is worn to
Echo upwards in the dull air.
I am a small thing hunched over
A warmth that outlines my life.
I don’t move much.
The windows fall like sunlight
Across the room. The small thing
Extends a hand, imagines bones
The bars of light shift slightly.
We are property, and property
Is theft: I cannot cotton the eaves
To shut out sounds of ownership.
Slowly,
Assuredly,
Footfalls rise
On the neglected stair.
Snow Fences
Inside the letters there is no weather.
The deer startle Joanna in the backseat
There on the edge they await her cry.
Don’t you realize it’s the first snow?
High was we are, who knows the others
Seeing what we see.
Inside the words fit like a glove
So frozen it cannot write.
Until I asked, who knew what the fences were for?
Keeping nothing in or out, like blown tires on the road’s shoulder
Explaining why we drive
Until we are driven.
I Worry Over Small Words
I worry over small words
To make them speak to you
As if I cared.
In the light I follow birds
That croak of all things new
I worry over small words
Because I want them heard
The false ones and the true
As if I cared.
Apart from what’s occurred
I look for things to do.
I worry over small words
To make them speak to you
As if I cared.
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