This Poem was Submitted By: James C. Snowden On Date: 2001-02-05 00:17:06 . . . Click Here To Mail this Poem to a Friend!

To Listen to Music While Reading this Poem, just Click Here!

Click Here To add this poem to your "Voting Possibilities" list!


Firstborn

Inside his head, inside such a big, empty house-- both dead at these embarrassing moments. Now it must come to this, an amnesia fit at dinner time and his whole world coming to labor at his fruits, those telling addictions of youth. How a mother could smile and eat her child... How a mother pulled a swallow from the sky and handled it, turning him upon his back, examining what sex a beast could be spread across a very long tree limb. It was never enough to wrestle his silence, to open up his shirt and search the heart; everything dyed red for inspection, everything swollen against its neighbor. Instead she pulled the shades  to hide the interior of her mistake--  and like tight underwear, it threw his voice two octaves and delivered her dream. Could a man be born twice, lose all memory of fits and pink buttons tied to a string-- feed himself pieces of lies until  they all seemed sufficiently whole, a mad loaf in the cabinet with her medicines? Would it satisfy her theory of a life; this son forced out like a bad hand inside a pocket of strange blood? It was all without purpose. It remains a spoiled habit. May she someday stand naked when the coldness of her discipline  reaches out to, once again,  comb every hair in place.

Copyright © February 2001 James C. Snowden


Sorry, there are no critiques for this poem in our system... If the poem is older, the critiques have been purged! Poetry Contests Online at The Poetic Link

Click HERE to return to ThePoeticLink.com Database Page!