Monday, May 1, 2017

We Could Buy The Farm

You let your iridescent nets down,
catching more than intended. My breath's song
uncovered its coda, clamoring to ring
in an era of breathlessness, threshes a lip
between teeth, traces jutted collar-bone
with finger-tip, a child loose on a vibrant farm.

Your future dwells on a foregone farm.
Bottomless reality perpetually lets down.
The grass beneath you has been fed by bone
since before we were born— carbon's swan song
and the quivers you hear are a lower lip,
hung up on the radius of a ring.

From the rafters of the outer ring,
I watch the distant workings of the farm,
where you stand in crowded splendor by the lip
of a small pondlight lowers down
past the cattails, stars thrash their heavy song,
dusting shadow with particles of bone.

You were hardly more than water and bone
I wrung your shoulders, left a ring
of condensation beneath the eyes, a part of the song
you had always passed through. These farm-
hands are happiest when burning down
the barn. Sweat glistens above the lip,

brimming with light. Your holy lip
terrifies, plunges my tongue toward hip-bone
straits. Tastes your water as it drips down
my chin, plucks your immaculate ring
from its altar. I would bet the farm
that once is enough to burn this song

into your body, forging a new song
in the garage of your thunderous lip.
I am rich your presence all the farm
ever needed to carry this satchel of bone
beyond, across the divide, into the ring
where lives are raised to be cut down.

A diaphanous lip woven bone
song in the shape of a luminous ring,
and us on the farm, letting each other down.

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