Galaxies
An American sentence acrostic golden shovel, after the Indigo Girls
Grooving around our small town on the last night before college, we wondered, What
about the predicted meteor shower? Clouds were balled-up tissues, half-blotting. Would
telescopes, which we didn’t have, make a difference in how to perceive distances? You,
the ever-optimist, armed only with my favorite ice cream, pretended that luck would give
amateur stargazers like us the opportunities for bursts of clarity. But even with tools for
astronomers we would have had a difficult time detecting bolides. I watched instead your
light travel first to the future, then back to when you found me hiding behind books as a kid.
Up in the sky, somewhere beyond, dying constellations took down the stories of my fears.
Glory Is the Passing Kidney Stone
An American sentence acrostic
Praise the canine squeaky-toy seize in the stomach, hoof in
the abdomen, skittery, glancing, under-the-ribs
fishtail of warning. Praise the ripple that the clinched
palms row over in the lake of the body,
that the breath hiccups and hitches with,
never failing to be taken by surprise, praise its
stop-and-start nature that jerks you like a hook
rising from the depths to the surface, bringing
up nothing but seaweed, the bait stolen
in an underwater coup d’état. Praise this organ
worship from the inside-out, the blood given in honor
of it, or taken from it, tinging the pale streams of
sun that plunge from you into crimson, rebel brilliance.
[…] Jen Karetnick: American sentence: Grooving about telescopes, the amateur astronomers light up. Golden shovel: What would you give for your kid fears? American sentence acrostic golden shovel, after the Indigo Girls: https://sweetlit.org/jen-karetnick-volume-16/ […]