Literal, Littoral, Littleral
Published in Poem Of The Day
I have enough times been the ampersand,
the hitch between two vehicles
the vehicle itself careening questionably
up the mountain road, which is,
in my opinion, poorly designed, a hazard.
It is sometimes called the coast,
the coastal highway, but never
the cliff-side transfer whereby you take
your life in your hands, or more literally
the wheel in your hands, or the hands
beside which you sit, the wheel by which
many subtle gestures ensure
your safe arrival. Anyhow, it seems to me
a very poor choice of transit. However
much we love vehicular independence,
the illusion thereof. Or the glamour
of regency ghouls. That golden age.
Anyhow, the vehicle, she, why not,
that has many times been me,
and hardly splendorous, sinking
dolefully, doefully, dutifully
into the "lake," rolling graceless over,
eating up the "blurred yellow lines,"
eating pavement, often graciously so.
I have been the pinch of weather
in the phenomenological space
between you lovers, the compartment
in which you exist hand to thigh.
The crowbar in the garden rusting
from strange use, with little ambition,
who would throw such a thing there?
And when I am no longer analogous,
I go. Likely poorer and better off besides.
About this poem
"This poem comes from a forthcoming collaborative Bon Aire Projects book with writer/artist Reagan Louise, wherein we wrangle with radical love, kinship, sisterhood, expansiveness and hilaria. This poem is relatively ready to embrace 2015."
-Danielle Pafunda
About Danielle Pafunda
Danielle Pafunda is author of "The Dead Girls Speak in Unison" (Coconut Books, 2014). She teaches at the University of Wyoming, Laramie.
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The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.
(c) 2015 Danielle Pafunda. Originally published by the Academy of American Poets, www.poets.org. Distributed by King Features Syndicate
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