The American Poetry Review

TWO POEMS

Entreaty Now

after Joanna Klink, for Mary Oliver

Go out barefoot to the car for what you left,for what you didn’t have enoughhands to hold.Go out as a soft offering for gravel.As a practice swing at walkingfarther and farther from the comforter,from the sighing waiting bodyyou hold when you wantfrom the steady windowpane shadowcast by a night so brighteven minor constellations get to speak light.They are furnace-ready pilot lightswhen the rest of the power’s gone out.They are all the failed matchesthat couldn’t get the cigarette lit,a persistent sign to go back inside of your life.To make each night a ripe stone fruit.To split and pull the pit from it.To bite the flesh of rest and let it drip.And when you have made a messof yourself, to know there were rows of orchardplanted in you before any other knowing.We are daylight animals.We still confuse the porch lightwith something that could burn us.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The American Poetry Review

The American Poetry Review12 min read
The Dark Whispers
i. We ride horses in the slowly-falling snowand you tell me it is Summer, it is warm,and I don’t quite believe you, but I love you,so I go along with the oddly humorous deception. My mother says “Love is blind”and “Hindsight is 20/20,” but it doesn’t
The American Poetry Review2 min read
Two Poems
A hologram of a horse galloping makes me anxious.It can’t stop going nowhere.How can I walk past it? We are late,led through the sexesto a quiet courtyard where I see a babycarriage, not the baby.Nobody cries for me at Horses.We are seated between tw
The American Poetry Review2 min read
Pink Horses
It was deep summer. The grasseswere all golden. Amber balesof hay, rolled tight as cinnamon buns, lay dottedaround a lone field oak, with horsesgrazing between. Years later, after we were married, after the birthof our son, the deathof our daughter,

Related Books & Audiobooks