Birthday Poem 1-8-2006 Revised THIRD TIME
by seanfarragher
Posted: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 Word Count: 169 Summary: Poem separated from "The Garden of Earthly Delights" Related Works: "The End of the World is Near" “The Garden of Earthly Delights -- 2005” Books from the Bible Broken Photographs, Dutch Art and Time Machines Tsunami 12/26/2004 TxM6 -- Taxi Murders -- Ghost Bridge Over Great Rivers What is; that is What Rough beast (Revised) Wonderful History -- World War Family 1948 |
January 8, 2006: Birthday Poem
by Sean Farragher
I rust in old streets where tar leaks
over the sky, making what is empty, full.
I do not die in this transformation.
I rest in America and watch history
as dramatic pause, keeping pace with
the guts of the streets. Step there. I am
old again. I am young in her eyes. She is
the delicate surprise that I log in my diary.
I count her. No, I court her. No, I fly
to the wind underneath her feathers. They
swish and lift my arms above her leap.
I said she was a bird. I speak of her as sweet
mouths wet with the lubrication of comets
dressed to seed sultry tectonic plates.
I do not exaggerate. How can I? There are no
lies left in the encyclopedia of stars. I drain them
with the answers I glean from wheat, corn and
the patter of her rocks above sacred landscapes.
I am not persuaded that life continues after death.
XXX
by Sean Farragher
I rust in old streets where tar leaks
over the sky, making what is empty, full.
I do not die in this transformation.
I rest in America and watch history
as dramatic pause, keeping pace with
the guts of the streets. Step there. I am
old again. I am young in her eyes. She is
the delicate surprise that I log in my diary.
I count her. No, I court her. No, I fly
to the wind underneath her feathers. They
swish and lift my arms above her leap.
I said she was a bird. I speak of her as sweet
mouths wet with the lubrication of comets
dressed to seed sultry tectonic plates.
I do not exaggerate. How can I? There are no
lies left in the encyclopedia of stars. I drain them
with the answers I glean from wheat, corn and
the patter of her rocks above sacred landscapes.
I am not persuaded that life continues after death.
XXX