PHRENOLOGY
Among bubbling of pond
scum, fish
swim towards a water lily’s white bloom.
swim towards a water lily’s white bloom.
A dragonfly with translucent
wings skips
across wavering
water, shuttling
towards a vertigo of gnats. A snail
upside down and oblivious of its Latin name
cochlea chews beneath a wafting leaf, thistle
down floats across a field, a mole moves
its star through soil.
towards a vertigo of gnats. A snail
upside down and oblivious of its Latin name
cochlea chews beneath a wafting leaf, thistle
down floats across a field, a mole moves
its star through soil.
MODUS OPERANDI
Had we gone to the city something
marvelous
might have happened. But we lived
in a little town
of boredom, where my mother said
if I didn’t
behave I would turn into another
Ted Bundy.
There was a big book and a little
book at home
I used to build a trestle for my
train.
The men shot pool in a basement
hall
where clouds of smoke hung like
chandeliers.
Taps on their shoes sang to the
hardwood floor,
rails of freight trains struck by
flying stones.
As a whistle blew to announce
noon at the plant
men took their lunch sacks and
sat on the lawn
to swap jokes and smoke and lie
about how many
women they’d had and how a dog that
danced
on its back legs was the best damned pointer
in the county and how it was
another plant
that spewed poisons that killed
crops and stank.
The boss would shout them back to
work
to don their rubber gloves and
aprons.
There was nothing for cheer
except a few beers
and a Friday night game, where
the home team
might throw a winning pass. When
Sunday was
over they got ready for another
week of wishing
something would happen, like a
bank robbery
or stumbling upon a neighbor’s
wife in her
back yard playing with herself.
PONIES WERE GRAZING
Behind a wooden fence ponies were
eating
their shadows, the last sun
burning their manes.
Leaves were holding on to
rippling limbs,
unaware a coming season would put
them down.
Moving along the darkening
highway,
I had to be somewhere before
morning.
The turning moon reflected from
the silver
of my wheels.
Blue lights were turning in
circles
in a muffle of silence.
Bodies were lifted from the road
on to a finality of gurneys.
And the blue uniform waved me
passed a crushed sedan.
My long headlights led me on, but
I was late
carrying a heavy load fallen upon
me.
William Page’s third collection of poems, Bodies Not Our Own (Memphis State University Press), was awarded a Walter R. Smith Distinguished Book Award. His collection, William Page’s Greatest Hits: 1970-2000, is from Pudding House Publications. His poems have appeared widely in such journals as The Southern Review, Sewanee Review, North American Review, Southwest Review, Ploughshares, American Literary Review, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Pedestal Magazine, North Dakota Quarterly, Wisconsin Review, South Carolina Review, and in numerous anthologies, most recently in The Southern Poetry Anthology Volume VI: Tennessee.
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