local_library The Mannequins at Delphi

by Luke Irwin

Published in Issue No. 190 ~ March, 2013

Headlights purchase being,

dealing cars by night lengths.

I am transacted across lives

for economies of passengers.

 

Once I am my daughter,

asleep beneath apple trees.

The snow is apple blossoms,

wandering insouciant into traffic,

her tiny body insouciant in traffic.

 

Twice I smoke in velvet noise

beneath colossal glowing teeth.

 

A glass house incubates three augurs.

Their forms are shining white:

Cashmeres feed on porcelain breasts.

Boots ripen on porcelain stalks.

 

Benedictions lock their hands in praise—

my darlings whisper it beneath their suns—

I hear, in each crinkled inhalation,

“The keenest orchard guards her sleep.”

 

I cross the city, find my car.

It’s white, shimmered with their lips, and shy.

Then I’m me. The world is roads I buy with light.

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Luke Irwin is pursing a Masters in Divinity and more of his poems can be found at thirdcardinal.wordpress.com. Other poems and stories have appeared in The Denver Syntax, Long Poem Magazine, and Anbobium.

One response to “The Mannequins at Delphi”

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