Today's poem is by Natalie Diaz
If I Should Come Upon Your House Lonely in the West Texas Desert
I will swing my lasso of headlights
let it drop like a rope of knotted light
While I put the car in park,
of light around your waist
wrapped three times
Reel me in across the glow-throbbing sea
the white inflorescence of yucca bells,
If you say to me, This is not your new house
I will enter the door of your throat,
build my altar of best books on your bedside table,
I will lie down in you.
Each steaming bowl will be, Just right.
break all your chairs to pieces.
you will remind me,
and pat your hand on your lap lighted
say, Here, Love, sit herewhen I do,
Until then, Where are you? What is your address?
on a full tank of gas and my headlights
across your front porch,
at your feet.
you will tie and tighten the loop
and I will be there with the other end
around my hips horned with loneliness.
of greenthread, bluestem prickly poppy,
up the dust-lit stairs into your arms.
but I am your new home,
hang my last lariat in the hallway,
turn the lamp on and off, on and off, on and off.
Eat my meals at the red table of your heart.
I will eat it all up,
If I try running off into the deep-purpling scrub brush,
There is nowhere to go if you are already here,
by the topazion lux of the moon through the window,
I will say, And here I still am.
I am hurting. I am riding the night
are reaching out for something.
Copyright © 2025 Natalie Diaz All rights reserved
from What the House Knows
Terrapin Books
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission
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