Canned Tulips
There was deep night asleep behind your eyes
black as the moon's turned face that lives
cold and dead behind her shine
but still like her, you smiled the sky.
Our vices were soft clinging things
pink and innocent as a child's clean hands
petulantly pulling at the dolls of our virtues,
lead angels falling on their sparrow wings.
We drove to Texas for the secret stones
but we only found the hardrock end.
The Gulf rains erased our cartoon faces,
the sharks circled in and ate our bones.
When the ambulance came you stood alone
with no can-opener for all the tulips you'd canned,
peeled like an orange to your soft sweet core,
while I cried a pool in the sand's sucking bowl
for the sky to come down
in your smile and make us whole.
April 2025
posted for Word Garden Word List
and
D'Verse Poet's Pub
Images: Tulips in a Milk Carton, 1989 ©Paul Wonner Fair Use
Sharks, ©Utagawa Kuniyoshi Public Domain