Poem of the Day
hand-to-hand pass
By Simone White
while the palms touch and digits suggestively link
so movement of the hands of each
does occur
while the palms touch and digits suggestively link
so movement of the hands of each
does occur
The blonde unlocks
her daddy’s Firebird,
blood-red as a tropical fish.
The sun drills a hole between my shoulder blades
I am ashamed that I want self-degrading things
I burn for no reason like a lantern in daylight
The way I had it figured as a kid,
This Mercury would be a relic now
Mounted in some museum, on display
When, in the evening, I explore the succulent shadows
with their blue veins and black chrysanthemums,
their thorny places,
on a certain December day in 1981
the front page of The Sydney Tribune said that
Mrs. Smith had found a snake in her garden
“I'm looking forward to my death,” she said.
I sat upright. I watched her blond hair sway,
this college girl who taught our Sunday School.
Beginning as usual in the dark
well of an expensive late-night taxi,
you recall this scene; your father rushes
It’s the broken phrases, the fury inside him.
Squiggling alto saxophone playing out rickets
And jaundice, a mother who tried to kill him
I am looking at a movie
In which the monster is
Never seen—so far.
Then two juncoes trapped in the house this morning.
The house like a head with nothing inside.
The voice says: come in.