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Today's poem is by Kate Northrop

Jittery Nocturne
       

Outside after a bad dream —no stars,
no canopy of leaves— just streets

and down those streets, like large, flat rocks
in the middle of a stream, my neighbors' houses.

·

But sometimes, walking around, simmering
straight on, I correspond with arguments

swimming at the heart of houses; I move parallel

to their interiors: a wedding dress, crates,
canned peaches —everything

sinking to the bottom of the bottom of houses.

·

Rain, starting slowly at first, striking

the bottom of a boat— a sound you can hear in the middle
of the night in houses. And there's a current pulling

at the boat, the movement of debt— we do not
do not own these houses.

·

Often I am brushed on the leg —right in the kitchen!—
by a fish, yet my sisters trust the integrity of houses.

Lately I'm happy to be having the sex I am having
most often now, inside of houses.

Those tiny, inquisitive sea horses, flickering
here and there— How they addressed us we remember in houses.

·

Later, like an allowance, the moon coming round: fat, white

Later the moon comes and floods
the alleys, empties the glowing rooms of our houses.

·

How I know I am not happens most often in houses:

creaking the floorboards, slowly breathing in houses.



Copyright © 2023 Kate Northrop All rights reserved
from New Letters
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission

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