To Ryan Upon Realizing It’s Only Day Sixteen
by Suzanne Allen
Time doesn’t so much fly as dissolve. I think it’s two, but the clock says five,
and I thought it had been twenty-seven days. I have no idea how many people
died today. Ask a hundred great men what knowledge is; they’ll say an edge, a
curse, a fleeting thing, but ask just one great woman and she’ll tell you
simply that there is always more mystery, like Cat, how each morning before
she’ll eat, she insists on that spot of light that bounces off my phone screen
in the sun, chatters at its shimmy on the ceiling, lurks as it slides down the
wall, then leaps and leaps. Her food was delivered today, but you knew that.
Enough for two months. Do you think she knows she’ll never catch that light?
* * * * *
"To Ryan Upon
Realizing It’s Only Day Sixteen " is part of
Suzanne Allen's new collection We Wash Our Hands (Write It! She
Said, September 1, 2021)
Suzanne
Allen is a teacher from Southern California. She holds an MFA from the CSU in
Long Beach, and her poems have appeared widely in journals, magazines and
anthologies, both in print and online, some have even won awards, but this past
year-and-a half, the newest ones have mostly only been written on postcards and
mailed near and far; not coincidentally, her first full-length collection, We
Wash Our Hands, is newly available on Amazon.com. She also has two
chapbooks: verisimilitude from
corrupt press (2011) and Little Threats
from Picture Show Press (2018).
Great one! You're sockin' it to us!
ReplyDeleteGeorge! Thanks! I've got your post card at the top of my submissions file, too ;) xOx, S
ReplyDelete