nancy depass davis
the poem
Angry with my poem because it played the hunchback, pretended to be mute and walked sideways like a crab, I cursed it as we fought in the desert where it had brought me. We scratched, bit, kicked and hit. It spat into my face, and I seized it by the throat with a wild shout and squeezed, murder in heart and hand. It leapt into my mouth and refused to come out. Bleeding, I fell weary on the sand and wept with loss. Then my poem emerged into the day, put a fine-formed foot upon my chest and leaned as perfect as a desert rose to kiss me where I lay.
posted: june 26, 2005 | 11:37 am