Wade

The ruins sitting quiet on the belly

of the earth, the slush of water filling

the bleached street, the mouth of deluge

raising a toast to white hills, and

the farmers’ agony and its harvest basket

of tears, are the bodies of this poem

sickening my inside like a claw.

 

My wet body, a flotsam at edge

with the drenched cushions

scattered across the void, through

the roil of heavens, the sepia grief.

 

How the sky unheld a dirty flood

against a city clogged with neglect,

robust at the throat of its sewerage.

 

Tell God, this city is not a kitchen basin.

Say His name is near to the homeless teeth

gnashing in the dripping cold. Say i body

enough colours in my protest to rainbow

this wreckage into a fleeing breeze.

 

Yet every second of feet-sweeping,

I dread if the mouth of flood is shallow

enough to hold my head above the waters,

trembling with step towards a dry exile.