Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
This road is every dirt road, every grassy ditch and wheat field; that hill near every river. The stairs that shuttle down are the same stairs in dreams, like fattened finger bones. Nothing, not even sky can bear the road. Pear trees are sometimes inverted, sprouting soggy fruit underground where muddy birds lay their eggs and hatching babies paddle up for air like sea turtles. There are alligators in every river, gardens of them wilting and waiting for the man who presses his arms together and carries the water to the mouth of the road, who gives what he has, and knows he’s no good.
0
Feb 5, 2012
Feb 5, 2012 at 1:58 PM UTC
In Dreams
This road is every dirt road, every grassy ditch and wheat field; that hill near every river. The stairs that shuttle down are the same stairs in dreams, like fattened finger bones. Nothing, not even sky can bear the road. Pear trees are sometimes inverted, sprouting soggy fruit underground where muddy birds lay their eggs and hatching babies paddle up for air like sea turtles. There are alligators in every river, gardens of them wilting and waiting for the man who presses his arms together and carries the water to the mouth of the road, who gives what he has, and knows he’s no good.
Written by
American
Feb 5, 2012
Feb 5, 2012 at 1:58 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem