Below me, the sheep fits the balcony like a shoe in a box,
He strains on rope, horns uncoiling, head lowered.
I hear him all night, bleating
- a baby in a crib.
He knows these are the blood
days.
I dream I set him free, watch him float from the sixth
floor,
hover over the city. He turns and turns in the scum of air,
serenades the fat belly of the
moon,
his hooves click like knitting
needles.
In the morning, I hear the lift
slam shut, its metal slide
the sound of steel on whetstone. His
dainty legs
clatter over marble like dancing girls,
children lose hands in
his wool,
flies gather like prophets.
He is mechanical now,
flies gather like prophets.
He is mechanical now,
head high, haunches shifting
like a rowed boat,
each step as if rehearsed, a
king whose
noose is a slipped crown. Eye
on the gibbet.
This is the last I see of him:
led past soldiers and barbed wire,
turning the corner, dignity mocking slaughter,
his silence a call to prayers.
This is the last I see of him:
led past soldiers and barbed wire,
turning the corner, dignity mocking slaughter,
his silence a call to prayers.
More of my poetry
can be read on http://www.odyssey.com,
http://www.chanticleer-press.com/, http://www.vivimusmag.com/poetry.html
i can smell the blood - poor sheep.
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