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My Life as Heiress to Your Throne, Darling

Strange times. When I speak of caressing your mantic lungs

I don’t know what I mean, but I know

I would hurl you under proper circumstances.

 

Darling, one whisper falls from a tree silently

so as not to wake the ghosts from their siestas.

Your robe has holes I can’t write of. I can fathom

getting there, what that might entail, wrapping,

 

as I am prone to, my fingers around your furry pincers

while I wait for you to read my rights to the ceiling fan

 

who whirls above our renovated combustions like the glowering

eye of our Lord upon the teary-eyed wicked.

I am not looking to escape through the window, darling.

 

I am diving for your diamond-in-the-rough, peeling off barnacles,

making moustaches of seaweed. You threw it into that ocean-

sized trough in which you drown lizards as way of

stress-release. I don’t know what I’ll do next.

 

The poor man. You give me your hand,

darling, and your robe, your robe is shiny like a pubescent star,

 

and it shimmies like a wagon piecing itself apart, as you

piece yourself apart, starting with your smile, which was always more

like a photograph of a dune in a textbook.

 

You give me your hand. It is a blue egg

dusted with microorganisms. I sprinkle it with our fragrance,

what’s left of it. I wish happiness upon your sleep-life, doldrums

upon your late-night haunting. I am tired and these

 

machines are so convenient, bringing me on all-expenses-

paid visits to the site of your burial. Or is it your sister’s?

 

I quote, my heart is like a walled onion.

The poor man is tired. It is not 1904 anymore.

You are not smiling anymore, darling, but you give me your hand.

 

You give it in a basket with parsley and cheese

and cut-outs from The Waterlogged God.

You give it almost grudgingly but I will keep it.

You tell me you’ve been dreaming again of train stations.

 

I wonder what that means.

I wonder about your eyes.

 

There are many spiders inside the wall, and along it,

and on the chandelier’s fingers, and inside the spiders.

I quote, a dream is worth a thousand dustpans, but you,

 

darling, are worth so much more than dustpans.

But I grow weepy, as stated. What do those dark blue lines mean?

Your fingers, darling, smell of a dark cloud in an electrical storm.

Your palm is a circus. Your nails ticket stubs.

 

That one’s from the alligator show. You dislocated your

throat. I had a plan. If you stare into someone’s eyes for

 

more than six seconds, you’ll want to lick them.

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Written by
timothy-essex
Published
May 25, 2010
Lines·Words
46·440
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