I’ve sewn twenty-one stitches
around the lobster claw quilt
I’ve shoved twenty-one Corso’s
like needles – up my sleeve
I’ve grimaced at twenty-one fists
upturned at my stomach – silver
I’ve counted twenty-one toes
Upon the cobblestone countess
I’ve matched twenty-one lost woes
Trampling broken arches
I’ve felt twenty-one pierced nets
Around my arms and gallops
I lose twenty-one letters
Between the day and night
I bathe twenty-one tired faces
Inside of the hot coal tin
I give twenty-one cold comas
To children – pieced together and angled
I shiver twenty-one shakes
At the sight of tree-lined women
I fill twenty-one lakes
With thoughts and heart-strings - delivered
I end twenty-one poems
With a sense of beauty queens and geological gestures
© 2007 Clementine
Copying this work to another webpage without author permission is plagiarism.
Plagiarism is a misdemeanor, usually punishable by fines of $100-$50000 and up to one year in jail.
Printed from www.DarkPoetry.com/dp/1843/92270 on Thursday August 28th, 2008 06:55 PM
Certain elements © 1996-2008 Matthew Steven (matts.org)
Comments on May This be a Test to Tarantula Tones and Fevers