Today's poem is by Kate Northrop
Jittery Nocturne
Outside after a bad dream no stars,
no canopy of leaves just streetsand down those streets, like large, flat rocks
in the middle of a stream, my neighbors' houses.·
But sometimes, walking around, simmering
straight on, I correspond with argumentsswimming at the heart of houses; I move parallel
to their interiors: a wedding dress, crates,
canned peaches everythingsinking to the bottom of the bottom of houses.
·
Rain, starting slowly at first, striking
the bottom of a boat a sound you can hear in the middle
of the night in houses. And there's a current pullingat the boat, the movement of debt we do not
do not own these houses.·
Often I am brushed on the leg right in the kitchen!
by a fish, yet my sisters trust the integrity of houses.Lately I'm happy to be having the sex I am having
most often now, inside of houses.Those tiny, inquisitive sea horses, flickering
here and there How they addressed us we remember in houses.·
Later, like an allowance, the moon coming round: fat, white
Later the moon comes and floods
the alleys, empties the glowing rooms of our houses.·
How I know I am not happens most often in houses:
creaking the floorboards, slowly breathing in houses.
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Copyright © 2023 Kate Northrop All rights reserved
from New Letters
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission
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