Today's poem is by Carl Phillips
Darkening, Brightening
Listening's not enough, you've gotta watch them, that way they feel
less lonely. Him singing. Maybe I'm singing it. Latest hunch:
it's been too late, forever. Raft of sunset. Swing
of the mind like a fist, swingingrough here, here
more delicate, as if undecided: to mean no harm, or
to not especially,
just now, be looking for it. The raft
noticeably less steady here, where the water this
otherwise silence most resembles has turned abruptly still:
braid-less, the water. Like remembering the words themselves
Swans rowing at nightfall across a sky filled with snow, and
Very little we wouldn't have done for what we thought
was powerbut not
who said them. The breeze
notwithstanding. The usual first moths appearing,
moth-like, flower-like, like those flowers from childhood
we used to call Strip Heaven, a game, something someone
played , once. The way I'm figuring it, the half-life's
not a half-life,
when it's all you've known, he says, watching me
watch back. The sound of two bucks locking antlers. Sound
of luckshadow-luckwhen, unexpectedly, it seems
there's been
some mistake. I hate the word unbearable. All this talk about
trust coming always down, after much struggling, to a
drowned body:
easily lost; not irretrievableVery well, then. Drag the lake.
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Copyright © 2016 Carl Phillips All rights reserved
from Poetry Northwest
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission
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