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Amanda Cooper Dec 2010
you are staring
at the floor and youre
tongue tastes like
cigarettes and your
eyes look like
frosty windowpanes.
i say your name but
you are staring
at the floor.

now i am staring
at my toes and my
tongue tastes like the
ocean and my
eyes look like the
california sunshine.
but its raining outside
and i am staring
at my toes.

and you speak to me
in lyrics
and you tell me
i’m the moon
and you tell me
my hair is braided
with the stars
and you tell me
i am lost in some
great galaxy gaze.

and i speak to you
in white noise
and i tell you
that youre hazy
and i tell you
your eyes are dusty
from the stars
and i tell you
youve stopped looking
toward the sky.
Amanda Cooper Feb 2010
It was early morning when she descended the steps
to the porch side, teacup in hand, dressed in her nightgown.
Steam billowed from her cup, and with a swallow
she examined her garden of weeds and unexpected peonies.
It was early for blooming peonies; frost, like glass,
still settled on the lawn, reflecting sunrise light of tangerine.

The radiant glow of tangerine
cast amber trails across steps
covered in an icy coating of glass.
Between her fingers she tucked her nightgown
and gingerly treaded the garden of peonies
that melted the frost in one great flower swallow.

The barn swallow,
perched not far from the path of tangerine,
must have also taken notice of the peonies
as he took the first steps
to nest-building. She imagined that his lady bird, also in her nightgown,
would enjoy the flowerbed of glass

that he chose for their home. Sipping her glass
of tea, she admired the familiar swallow
lover as she folded into her nightgown
bouquets of peonies that glistened in the tangerine
sunlight. She took the steps
back to the house, recalling her own swallow’s peonies:

Peonies
placed in vases of glass,
peonies lining the porch steps,
peonies presented over morning tea. With a swallow,
she carefully, methodically lined the tangerine
trail with the peonies from her nightgown.

Her nightgown,
stained with the rouge petals of peonies,
dragged along the tangerine
terrace of glass,
blood red with the memory of her swallow
lover’s peony-petaled steps.

The steps to the house creaked beneath her nightgown.
The barn swallow, quieted by the rouge of the peonies,
shut his glass eyes to the skies of tangerine.
2009

— The End —