Open this poem
From the piece of my brain
that thinks elsewhere I want
to flick open this poem
like a Zippo and light
a fire on your arm hair,
the impetus to jump out
of the box you confine
your noggin in. I want
to flip open this poem
to reveal the inner intentions
the true guts of it. I want to scatter
the words like a deck of cards,
a puerile shuffle, and see down
past them the depth of which
I am currently unaware. I
want to dissolve
this poem to reveal a
single poetic atomic
itching awe in my mind.
Black Spot
Sitting on my sofa, something
catches my attention
in my peripheral.
There is a black spot on my ceiling.
Its shape is unclear from this distance.
I think I have not seen it before
but I may have seen it
everyday, an irregular in the drywall,
and return to reading my magazine.
After some time I look at the spot again.
It seems closer to me.
It is closer to me.
It’s a bug.
There’s a damn bug
in my house.
Bastard!
It moves toward me
when I am not watching
and stays still
when I stare.
Like death.
Dark.
Creeping.
Motionless.
Everyday.
Every single day.
Each time I glance up
I hope to see it retreating
having found nothing to
feed on. It must have found
something to feed on.
I look again minutes later
and it is closer still,
of course.
Soon it will be overhead,
of course.
Soon it will fall in my lap
and I will cuss jump and jerk
like I didn’t know
it was going to happen.
The Smell of Honey
Some say my dog loves me. Honey seems happy
to see me but I see her as more needy than loving.
Every day she roams the manicured back yard
and eats dog food that I buy at a grocery.
While her snacks vary a little the same dog food
is out for her every day. As she lies down she listens
and wonders when again she will be petted or fed.
When I lean down to touch
my forehead to hers
I smell the matted hair of
an ancient wolf hungry, chasing
a meal on a clumpy prairie
panting panting
missing and missing.
On another chase
and missing again.
Catching the next one
on the fuel of desperation.
I smell the tearing
of flesh and the yanking
of meat that does not
want to leave the bone.
I smell the luxury of blood
all over the sated wolf’s snout and paws.
I owe it to Honey to pull
on a rope with her. When I lean down
to touch my forehead to hers,
Honey smells a man
bewildered in a supermarket
wondering if he’s lived his life right.
Edward Tedrow lives in Slidell, Louisiana with his wife.
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