»
«

“On Some Early Modern Artifacts” by Zach Savich

Rumpus Original Poems bio ↓  ·  May 20th, 2009  ·  filed under blogs, books, Rumpus Original Poems

On Some Early Modern Artifacts

The line you know best
Represents sadness.
That is your birthline.
It starts at the back of your thigh.
You’ve never seen it.
It takes enormous faith
To believe even dandelion, rain.
Ideas are just so many words.
Bats squeaking
In a moon-blue sky.
Those are closer to your line.
You know the joke
About the pioneer
Who, chagrined, unwrapped his
Mail-order bridge.
He studied it.  Once,
He said in the moments
Before you go deaf, you hear
A river.  After you’re blind,
You see it.  Can you believe that,
Little lullaby?  Here,
Shadows from telephone wires
Get thick enough to bump
A pick-up.  Some people
Have to always go back
To see if it was a body.
I’m like that with clouds.

-Zach Savich

Read the Rumpus Review of Zach Savich’s Full Catastrophe Living

Related Posts

···
From time to time, The Rumpus publishes new poems from poets we've reviewed. We link to the review at the bottom of each poem. More from this author →

Leave a Reply

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.