Portrait of a deer
To slide, my ruined mouth. An unlocked door. Burlesque: how stars react. At such a thought. A cavalcade of fresh grass. Doe. One hundred acre wood. Unseen, this whistled blacktop. Asks: what risk, in rewriting a beloved book? Tether, history. Go west. Talk to me of rest. Confessional: your hand, this scratch of leaves and logs. A spritely fox, or groundhog. Burrow. What eighty years ago was open field. The path is overgrown. We follow fenceline, sand. This much, impossible. A glimpse of sleep.
If this is: an experiment in living,
1.
because Glengarry
is what I think with,
roots from below,
an undercarriage,
a body must
be substance, codes
of quiet force,
an image
to shed cells
2.
within the limits
of fourteen lines,
a codex, biplanes
of monitored idioms
I warn you,
don’t land, temporary
middle stretch,
unopened doors,
creatures squirrel
& mouse,
3.
illuminates with a hole,
a finger-mark,
barcode landscape
, suburbs
etching clean me,
on rear windshield,
sharp,
unnoticed
allow no shape for light,
this simple brilliance,
4.
my mother’s car,
a process like a barrier,
flowers,
discontinuous, array
of rivers
Raisin,
oranges
to oranges
, the ripple of
debris,
5.
escape,
escape
from
& to
never
here,
My father, at seventy-six
Uplifts. A series of holes in the narrative. Cardinals, sparrows, jays. The fence-line. Stories new, renew and seemingly random. His three-legged dog. Cutter, diagonal across the back fields. His half-dozen grandchildren, wander. How has your health? What did the doctor? Solo, he holds up the farmhouse. Imagine literally, literally. The remains of last century. A splendid memory of trees. Outside: the sun and rain insert into the ground. Replenish soybean, corn.
Learn more about rob on our Contributors’ Page.
- Three poems by rob mclennan - June 17, 2021