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A
Submission
of poetry
from Jacob
Sam Larose
A
Life in
Dreams
There
have been
teeth
falling
loose from
their sockets
like
a shower
of petals
or bones.
There
has been
treacle;
attempts
to run against
a gravity
wound so
tight
that
single steps
were futile,
a
travelling
nowhere,
a
running
on the spot,
a
fanged leer
and a gnarled
hand
inching
ever closer.
There
have been
glorious
revolutions
in unnamed
countries,
wars
against
tyrants,
troops
like legions
of swarming
beetles.
There
have been
blades,
flashing
at the sun.
Once
or twice,
a fluency
in kung-fu.
Up
has mostly
been up,
though
has been
convincingly
turned
on
its head.
There
have been
drives down
unfamiliar
streets,
the
front of
a car crumpled
like
denim pulled
fresh from
the wash.
Once,
a mobile
home.
There
have been
more than
a few kisses.
Lots
and
lots of
school,
classrooms
and corridors.
A
hiding place
in a primary
attic.
There
have been
clothes,
forgotten
and
remembered
too late.
A
numbness
of gums.
Weightlessness.
Unassisted
flight.
Falling
but never
hitting
the ground.
Fear
as
solid and
real
as
table tops
or bed-frames.
There
has been
silence,
the
power of
sound cleft
from the
mouth,
the
jaw gummed
with quiet,
the throat
emptied
of ammunition.
There
has been
love.
There
have been
messages
passed
back and
forth between
hemispheres,
metaphors
like
acres of
fortune
cookies.
All
this, behind
shuttered
and fluttering
eyes
and,
I'd wager,
some of
the best,
where
everything
moved like
snowfall
and
time itself
was as delicate
as a snowflake,
melting
on the tongue.
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