Savoring the Sweetness

Savoring the Sweetness

 

They walked in that pagan dream
wherein violets grew
distant flutes were playing,
stood alone in a wonderland
as the deer of legend ran past,
plum light intense around him

she loosened her hair, rearranged it,
wished she was wearing her
wrapper with the torn ribbon bows
he dared not look–in reverence
turned his glance from the
worshipful agony they shared

a holiday of silence as they sipped
from silver cups, attraction of
opposites, solidified by peril
hastily she touched his hair,
embraced him with the tenderness
of a crow calling the spring to come.

 
Found poem, culled from pages: 74, 77, 78-79,451-452, and 737 of the novel Andersonville, by MacKinlay Kantor.
Previosuly published on Found Poetry Review’s “Pultizer Remix Project” website for National Poetry Month, April 2013.  
Photo “Blue Forest Path,” courtesy of Nicolas Raymond under a Creative Commons license, www.freestock.com.  
 

Hope and Beauty

Hope and Beauty

Beatrice

I remember the skin
on your bald head,
smooth and glowing
white, like a moon
green flashing eyes–
a smiling viper with
full red lips and
nails like flames shooting
from your fingertips.
How could anyone so sick
be quite so sharp
and beautiful?
after you left,

we found ourselves
stuffing newspapers
into empty Levi’s
and a black cashmere sweater,
a foam wig-holder head
motorcycle-boots, shoes.

It wasn’t until we put
our golem
into your favorite seat
at the end of the
yellow-flowered,
grandmother couch
that we realized,
we had tried
to recreate you.

Published in the anthology, Radical Dislocations:  Best New Underground Poets, 2013.

Photo by Michael Dziedzic on Unsplash