time holds
the wake dearly.
syllables
congeal
into smooth
stamped clauses
to translate
the weather of a face,
hand.
bite, nail.
the vagrant
and executive
never change
but
grammatical lines are traversed
like ions
across a circuit maze
between the
sun and lately
i fast on
roses
to eat the
me in meaning is
an
i n g
must you tie
my hands
to your book
bury my
river with your sands,
to come up
for water.
for language
is more difficult
than space
more fluid
than the
body
yet transparent
against
the ground
of
Kate Siklosi lives, writes, and thinks in Toronto. She holds a PhD in English Literature but has defenestrated from the academic ivory tower in search of warmer climes. She is a writer by day and a poet by night. Her first chapbook – a collection of really neat letraset poems – is coming out with above/ground press this spring. She is the cofounding editor of Gap Riot Press and is currently working on a manuscript of experimental petro-poetry, Love Songs for Hibernia.
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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