Gratitude: A Horror Film
Gratitude lives in the basement, lingers
between dimensions
when white lights flash and organ music plays.
Gratitude has a face of bone and teeth.
When Gratitude smiles, paint curls on the walls,
spiders drop from the ceiling, burning in their intricate
webs.
Gratitude is always hungry.
It brings you plates of oranges and grapes,
offers wine with a label that reads “Mother Liked to
Drink.”
None of this ends well.
A brave detective falls down with a knife in his
brain,
wise counsellor chokes on a plum pit and is buried in the
clay.
Sometimes Gratitude lies in the dust,
its tongue pierced and coated with blood.
Sometimes it climbs a hidden staircase beneath the
well.
Gratitude can wait, and when, at last
the old house burns with wild and lively flames,
the closing credits smoke like words written in the language
of flies.
The Poem Escapes Its Golden Cage
And no, this is not a poem about writing poetry.
Its cage is made of gold only because that way
soft bars bend, poem slips out
and tiptoes quietly down the long hall.
Halfway to the door it pauses, thinks hard
about its next move.
Out the window, a huge, yellow moon
rising over pine-topped hills.
Bullfrogs croak in the wet reeds, deep
sound so loud it’s a wonder anyone can sleep.
Shadows stretch in the bedroom,
kitchen tools bleak and foreign in the dark.
Down the street, dimmed ice cream
parlour lights outline a giant chocolate cone.
Front door opens like a gash.
Night air, sticky warm, tastes free as fireflies.
The Horsemen
I see that I will by lying
in the lightning on an alp of
death
and out of my eyes horsemen will be
riding
W. S. Merwin
Through cloud they will ride,
and rain, eyes burned to glowing coals.
Until the war is over, they will ride, they will charge,
willing their horses up the hill.
Together they will die a thousand times.
Until the war is over, they will shout the battle cry,
lead the rising waters, flood the streets.
All night they will hunt for the moon,
for the hidden stars.
All night they will crash
through ragged brush.
In the morning they will feast on stones,
they will taste fire, gorge
on swamp mud and sticks. Until the war ends,
they will sing a thousand songs of hurricanes and
lies.
To the desert they will ride,
to broken cliffs on the back of the sea.
Where they throw their lariats, islands disappear.
Steve
Klepetar lives in the Berkshires in Massachusetts.
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