Poetry |

“Of Lunar Note”

Of Lunar Note

 

The shadow on the moon suggests

a sad and drooping eyelid.

 

How crude of Earth to censor

its timid little acolyte …

 

We stand in the cold and stare

so hard into the ether our necks

 

kink like last year’s garden hose.

The atmosphere’s cast in stone.

 

Breathing it costs more money

than we can afford. Politics

 

quicken in the south, while crime

shatters the north with mourning.

 

We’re facing south but feel the north

tighten its nooses to sever us

 

from what little remains of our voice.

We should go inside and embrace

 

the severity of the woodstove.

We shouldn’t let the night sky

 

apply its tongs to those organs

we’ve reserved for very old age.

 

The eclipse forms a statement

in a language not even those

 

adept with the gnarly math

of astronomy can interpret.

 

How can we impress ourselves

on the drama of the cosmos

 

without becoming protagonists?

The shadow engulfs the moon

 

as if an eye has shut against us.

We refuse to participate

 

in an excess of metaphor.

With a sigh of closure we step

 

inside to brew some cocoa

and pretend that loutish shadow

 

wasn’t cast by our design.

Contributor
William Doreski

William Doreski has published three critical studies and several collections of poetry. He has taught writing and literature at Emerson, Goddard, Boston University, and Keene State College. His new poetry collection is A Black River, A Dark Fall.

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