Saturday, 4 January 2025

One Poem by Adam Fieled

 





Dresser


It wasn’t real, was it, or maybe it was, us,

there, together in bed, as though you were

Mary, as though we were married, as though

you could be her, that person, generating

domestic sweets for your old man, he gnarled

after a long day of fighting in the world, ready

once again to prove potency against oppressors

who would have us cold, limp, silent, faded

in that beige-walled bedroom, lifted above

the rest of the apartment, wooden dresser catching

your eye to show up later, in a painting not related

to me, also there as someone only partially related to me,

searching the world as your own scout for signs of

visible life, the dresser livelier than me, its grains, fronts—






Adam Fieled is a writer based in Philadelphia. His books include Opera Bufa, Equations, and Apparition Poems. Manuscripts-in-progress include Something Solid, Letters to Dead Masters, and A Poet in Center City. A magna cum laude Penn grad, he edits P.F.S. Post.


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