A Space Odyssey Sestina

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Seventeen years of life under dirt

cicadas collect and in quiet clicks

skittering, creaking, burrowing down

they mumble about the apocalypse

seventeen years to gather thoughts

and cooking pots, and preen their wings.

 

Forty feet up a cluster bomb wings

over heads with tongues tucked in hot dirt

teeth drawing red from gum holding thoughts

of mothers and lovers in movie reel clicks

spun flammably out between gossamer lips

they supplicate up, but keep their heads down.

 

(We’re hauling water down

to the ship as she swings

in the black brackish slips

of salt that sat forty years locked in dirt

now lift our Lady for fifty-five klicks

sunburned, we sing to flatten our thoughts.)

 

Selkies shed fins as they slide into thoughts

silking their mythical hips down

cools the bursting sun who tricks with clicks

of deliquesced, cracking wax Icarus wings

we weep for firm ground, for tillable dirt.

We’d trade liquor for her, and skin for cowslips!

 

Flung from the globe with a lisp on his lips

pricking the stratosphere shatters his thoughts

the rocketship sloughs her terrestrial dirt

while Commander’s breaths drip slowly down

his helmet. No sun on his wings.

Just a vascular clock ticking red and blue clicks.

 

Seventeen years of these star-spangled clicks

turning purple with unspoken fears on his lips.

Seventeen! Three to go. His wife in the wings

waiting underground, spinning slick thoughts,

her green drying wings drooping flimsily down,

heavy with battle, coated with dirt.

 

She weaves dirt with her wrists, joints clicking

cosmological threads held with windchapped lips,

humming thoughts of biplanes with aluminum wings.

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