July Is Mean and Limp
by Carrie Vaccaro Nelkin
July is mean and
limp
like the clothes
she hangs
in the bathroom to
dry,
sopping for three
days
as wind inhales
outside the high
window.
In her dreams
November gusts
burst through wind chimes
tinkling in
moonlight,
but mornings the
air wraps
a warm wet tongue
down her neck
and round her
thighs.
Her walls sweat
like slabs of lard
and let out the
bellicose breath
of fusty old age
when she opens the
door.
July is mean and
limp
and sour
and lives in the
red shorts
on her
vein-throttled legs,
the skin of her
soft white arms,
the pink beneath
her hay-and-silver
hair.
What to do?
What to do in this
pitiless time
with one virago
behind
and one still to
come?
What but fan
and rock and sit
spread-legged
so the bulges have
room,
and caress
the small black
radio
close to her ear
and hang more
clothes
in the bathroom to
dry
and listen for
wind chimes at
the height of the
sun
as she heard them
last night
in her dream?
* * * * *
"July Is Mean and Limp" was originally published in Rose & Thorn Journal (November 2012).
Carrie Vaccaro Nelkin’s
poems have appeared in Third Wednesday, Grasslimb Journal, Poppy Road
Review, Connecticut River Review, Poetry Quarterly, and other places.
Carrie is author of the novel Snare (The Waiting Dark) and
has stories in journals like Bards and Sages Quarterly, Supernatural
Tales, and Luna Station Quarterly.
A visceral barrage of surprising images.
ReplyDeleteSo visceral! Global warming in full poetic effect! Thank you!
ReplyDelete