Liking
tweets like finding a path through birdsong
Letting
the algorithm tell me what music
To
listen to, feeding it “Silver Dagger”
By
Joan Baez and even though she says “Sing
No
songs”* they come anyway, forever, the
Knife
in the song’s mother’s palm notwithstanding
I
boarded a raft bound for the edge of the
World
but never made it, only found water
Roiling
until even the gulls flew inland
To
get away from it, its simple rhythm
Too
calm and lasting too long for us to keep
Up
with, despite counting beats on the riptide
Being
sometimes our only way to survive
*Sorry
it’s “Don’t sing love songs” with “don’t” and “love”
Almost
unstressed, the music the crucial part
Of
the line, over against the omitted
Command
(“Don’t [..] love”) that “Silver Dagger”’s speaker
Ends
up following by the song’s envoi, a
Pushing
away of the moon and stars of love
Back
into the dark lake of the heart from which
They
arose in her lover’s chest, not yet song
But
getting close enough to earn a warning
Who
among us isn’t terrified to think
Of
one person we love killing another
The
blood on the knife dripping predictably
Another
metronome of salt in this poem
Already
so heavily disfavoring
Sweetness
Tom Snarsky is a special education math teacher at Malden
High School in Malden, Massachusetts, USA. He is the author of Threshold, a chapbook of poems from Another New Calligraphy, and Recent Starred Trash, which is forthcoming from marlskarx. He lives in Chelsea, MA with his wife Kristi and their two cats, Niles and Daphne.
The Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
The Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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