Susan Wallack: November 2023
It's the name of a lipstick I wear
most days, proving
poetry's indomitable, ingrained, like the Namer
herself, wrestling thousands of new
untitled tubes- scarlets,
magentas, blue-reds, browns- but none
a gash, none a wound, no blood,
nothing wilted.
Stumbling cylinder to cylinder,
knowing full well what these balms
mean to a woman
dogging beauty.
Then at night, alone, aged skin
phosphorescent & furrowed
as a moon, she tends garden.
Pruning, shaping, watering
roots she planted in sand,
watering the sand.
originally published in New Zoo Poetry Review Volume 5
most days, proving
poetry's indomitable, ingrained, like the Namer
herself, wrestling thousands of new
untitled tubes- scarlets,
magentas, blue-reds, browns- but none
a gash, none a wound, no blood,
nothing wilted.
Stumbling cylinder to cylinder,
knowing full well what these balms
mean to a woman
dogging beauty.
Then at night, alone, aged skin
phosphorescent & furrowed
as a moon, she tends garden.
Pruning, shaping, watering
roots she planted in sand,
watering the sand.
originally published in New Zoo Poetry Review Volume 5
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home