Wild Grasses
as a girl, bare legs ablaze
with pollen, tamed beasts would pull you
into the wild grasses—
across the torch of midday,
august’s illegible twist & cut. roar
of those tall unnamable flowers;
& pond frogs, field mice,
wasps & yellow jackets, hornets,
& whatever force teased them upward, outward.
fear was not knowing a face
until it struck.
no warning, though sometimes
the dog would balk, its leash yank
in your sun-damp hands, before something split
the wave grass,
some angular primordial face,
if not toad
then snake,
if not black
then corn,
then one
of those awful kinds
with death wetting their mouths—
their lips a fulcrum
between equinox
& annihilation, a known world
left swaying at the skin’s edge.
& you’d grow strange, then—consequence
of such a miniscule mouth,
filament of fang,
half-dew-drip of venom—
made birth-slick, hound-
eared, deer-gazed, girl
resharpening the wan dulled animal.
& you’d feel, unsealing, a different possible.
first, an impact
dense as conviction, blunt force
like an arrow running
neat through bone. then, a poison’s
eloquence: you, unwinding,
unyours. toppled.
down & down,
back into the land’s
carnival of root,
where the long red worms, the patient
hyphae, would derange
your architecture: reuse, repattern you.
& you’d belong again.
now, here, tall-grown, you roam
the famed gardens
of a bare-boned city.
the sky is muzzled
with concrete.
your woman-feet
pad the sand-paths,
carelessly skirting
all this flora
combed & pearled
into allée after allée after allée—
& your eyes are searching—
still, still—
among clean lanes
of indexed flowers,
for what those wild grasses hid—
summer’s legion of oblivion jaws;
creatures beyond the rim of utterance,
beyond negotiation—
& roamed too close, you would know
whose dominion. you would know your place.
Source: Poetry (January 2022)