June 2019
Marc Darnell
medarnell65@gmail.com
medarnell65@gmail.com
I was hesitant to send dream things because they're rather creepy, but here are 3 anyway. I saw a fossilized trilobite and had a crawly dream about it, as well as a dream where I am a giant lizard, and a woman in a dismal, constantly moist town. Maybe I dreamed the town one because my mother lost her house in the floods this spring. Well, here goes.
trilobite
come Cambrian
child
out of this blooded
limestone
prison
come cryptic wild
unfossilized
from this tattered
coral
primordial
soup
and up
this
crepe
of a leg
do you lay
eggs
do you crawl
all
the intestinal
to have your
bottom-dweller
way?
A Local Infection of Woe
The endemic tears rained on our town, children
became paler, wan, prone to sad bouts
in their dank rooms, a hidden cauldron
distilling the tears to acid. My husband's shouts
returned to shiver my heart, enliven the aches
I'd left with the wad of mud on his swallowed coffin.
Other widows baked briny casseroles for wakes
they thought were coming, as the moon
never moved and dripped its gray pus,
the stars dimmed, done for. Eaves were full
of those tadpole tears that swam as a virus
through veins of streets, canals up to the pools
before our doors, into my cage of strength—
my ribs where ennui spreads its width and length.
Komodo
Suede of serpent is my skin,
charred reptilian, with more bacteria
in me than flesh-eating viruses.
This tongue smells all faunal selections
with dragon drool that's good protection
from slow two-leggers like you—you're
an easy snag, though your ghosted ape for
a face gives me mammalian indigestion.
I'd rather devour rabid dogs
than pull your over-veined husk apart,
though in drought I'd learn to drink you.
So run, my dear—my power's in my legs,
and you deserve a beast with heart at start—
this slobbering smile is only meant to chew.
trilobite
come Cambrian
child
out of this blooded
limestone
prison
come cryptic wild
unfossilized
from this tattered
coral
primordial
soup
and up
this
crepe
of a leg
do you lay
eggs
do you crawl
all
the intestinal
to have your
bottom-dweller
way?
A Local Infection of Woe
The endemic tears rained on our town, children
became paler, wan, prone to sad bouts
in their dank rooms, a hidden cauldron
distilling the tears to acid. My husband's shouts
returned to shiver my heart, enliven the aches
I'd left with the wad of mud on his swallowed coffin.
Other widows baked briny casseroles for wakes
they thought were coming, as the moon
never moved and dripped its gray pus,
the stars dimmed, done for. Eaves were full
of those tadpole tears that swam as a virus
through veins of streets, canals up to the pools
before our doors, into my cage of strength—
my ribs where ennui spreads its width and length.
Komodo
Suede of serpent is my skin,
charred reptilian, with more bacteria
in me than flesh-eating viruses.
This tongue smells all faunal selections
with dragon drool that's good protection
from slow two-leggers like you—you're
an easy snag, though your ghosted ape for
a face gives me mammalian indigestion.
I'd rather devour rabid dogs
than pull your over-veined husk apart,
though in drought I'd learn to drink you.
So run, my dear—my power's in my legs,
and you deserve a beast with heart at start—
this slobbering smile is only meant to chew.
© 2019 Marc Darnell
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