You are stringing arrows by a lilac bush
Every time I forget a person my body apologizes
Bad night of dreaming
The rows of devils thick as trash
I want a world I can get inside
We cross the street
In our bone marrow is bread
.
.
.
There’s oil in the plankton that lines the ocean
On the fifth morning you rise, the air around you soft as islands
The white dog shits in the grass
You want your dream masts to rise
Oil covers the sloping lawn
The black dog eyes the roses
You want to put the cold egg of her breast in your mouth
Trash gilding the roadside bramble
You walk to the store
The first level of the food chain is contaminated
Giant rocks covered in oil
You sit in your body, quietly making blood
Wild blood
Bird of the world
.
.
.
I cried so hard I cried rice
It fell from my eyes
I’ll love you later people sometimes say
Not now is a dynasty
Time stacks up then rises, steaming not-love
Eat it and love it
We stopped at Runza
Eat this, you said and I took a bite
Hope is cabbage and rice
Death sweeps it away
.
.
.
If I run over your arm will it feel like a pretzel?
I give grief to the same structures on a daily basis
The lilies are reaching out their death
You keep trying to leave
We’re lakeside on the same towel
This is the world one of us says
My grandfather nodding into his decaf
The car keeps going over the fence
The arm bleeds until love fills it
.
.
.
Emily Kendal Frey is the author of The Grief Performance as well as several chapbooks and chapbook collaborations, including Airport (Blue Hour 2009), Frances (Poor Claudia 2010), and The New Planet (Mindmade Books 2010). She lives in Portland, Oregon, where she hosts The New Privacy.
[…] for the advancement of poetry #7.” I also keep thinking about Emily Kendal Frey’s work from “SORROW ARROW” in the same […]