Women
are cities & cities
are
humiliating.
Tourists
haggle the price
&
somehow still pay double.
The city
is leaky
&
smells like fishwives.
Locals
chide in dialect
tangy as
a faux leather belt.
Men are
angry & angry men
turn each
other into volcanoes.
What is
it like to live
in the
shadow of a volcano?
On the
cusp of eruption
it’s
exciting
for the
tourists. Burning through
their
cash, it’s all you can smell.
Volcanoes
violate cities
to ash
& stone. It’s a pity.
I’d pumice my feet with it allif I could.
Domenica Martinello, from MontrĂ©al, Quebec, is currently completing an MFA in poetry at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. In 2017 she was a finalist for both the Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers and the 3Macs prize. Recent writing can be found in The Globe & Mail, Vallum, carte blanche, CV2, PRISM International, and elsewhere. Her debut collection of poems All Day I Dream About Sirens is forthcoming from Coach House Books in 2019. Find her on Twitter @domenicahope
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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