| dancing down 6th street You dance, yes you dance with breath against
my neck in front of hardback orange and crimson fiction. You
pause to catch my scent and start again. You stroll, fingers wrapped
around my fingers. You walk against the crossing signs as if you were
the moon and it, the shadow. Oxford shoes looking up, pointing the
way down 6th Street. Nestled against the wind sweeping through mountains
of high-tech architectural design. Glass and stone. How many tattoos,
you ask would it take to cover the harm, to cover the hurt you hide?
How many butterflies would shuffle against my skin like a parasol to shelter
all of the bad good-byes. The wounds of persimmon. The cuts of cattle
skulls left on a garden wall of seedless grapes, of morning glory.
How many? One Lilliputian butterfly? Or a swarm of dye around my
ankle bracelets. Only one, kind sir and even she would take away
with laughing wings as she lilted to the air - for she has put bad dreams
to bed without their supper where they wake to find you dancing
down 6th Street.
You and your oxford shoes.
Mia Moore

"This poem reminds of my the poetry class I took in college, in a good way. It has a strong(er) use of nouns than…"
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