People pointing, fingerpainting the world, leaving me the silhouette of my life. And I'm filling in the negative space with positively everything.
~ Edie Brickell
~ Edie Brickell
About Me
Poetry Friday: "Sleep in the Mojave Desert" by Sylvia Plath
Out here there are no hearthstones,
Hot grains, simply. It is dry, dry.
And the air dangerous. Noonday acts queerly
On the mind's eye erecting a line
Of poplars in the middle distance, the only
Object beside the mad, straight road
One can remember men and houses by.
A cool wind should inhabit these leaves
And a dew collect on them, dearer than money,
In the blue hour before sunup.
Yet they recede, untouchable as tomorrow,
Or those glittery fictions of spilt water
That glide ahead of the very thirsty.
I think of the lizards airing their tongues
In the crevice of an extremely small shadow
And the toad guarding his heart's droplet.
The desert is white as a blind man's eye,
Comfortless as salt. Snake and bird
Doze behind the old maskss of fury.
We swelter like firedogs in the wind.
The sun puts its cinder out. Where we lie
The heat-cracked crickets congregate
In their black armorplate and cry.
The day-moon lights up like a sorry mother,
And the crickets come creeping into our hair
To fiddle the short night away.
Hot grains, simply. It is dry, dry.
And the air dangerous. Noonday acts queerly
On the mind's eye erecting a line
Of poplars in the middle distance, the only
Object beside the mad, straight road
One can remember men and houses by.
A cool wind should inhabit these leaves
And a dew collect on them, dearer than money,
In the blue hour before sunup.
Yet they recede, untouchable as tomorrow,
Or those glittery fictions of spilt water
That glide ahead of the very thirsty.
I think of the lizards airing their tongues
In the crevice of an extremely small shadow
And the toad guarding his heart's droplet.
The desert is white as a blind man's eye,
Comfortless as salt. Snake and bird
Doze behind the old maskss of fury.
We swelter like firedogs in the wind.
The sun puts its cinder out. Where we lie
The heat-cracked crickets congregate
In their black armorplate and cry.
The day-moon lights up like a sorry mother,
And the crickets come creeping into our hair
To fiddle the short night away.
* * * * * *
On Tuesday, we drove through the Mojave Desert on the last leg of our trip home. I saw a glistening river leading to a shining silver lake near two hills. When we got closer, it disappeared. Mojave's thirsty air sucked my lungs dry. In the seconds it took our AC to kick in after we got back into the car from a Dairy Queen oasis, I felt like I had been baked in a kiln for an hour. On the other side of the Mojave lies Death Valley.
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- Alexandria the Great
- Bookish
- carpe diem
- Chats with Josh
- Everything would be splendid if only there were nachos and cake
- Gimme that old time religion
- If this isn't nice I don't know what is
- Mushy Stuff
- Noah's world
- Philip Pullman is a pistol
- Tangled up in Bob
- They're coming to take me away--haha
- Write on
- Yet another post full of those dad-blamed whippersnappers


1 comments:
I can understand the attraction--it's such an unusual place. Otherworldly. I do like the vastness of it and the way the sky seems so much larger.
I liked this phrase: "...the mad, straight road" because it does seem crazy how the road looks like it goes on forever, sometimes with no landmarks or other cars in sight for extremely long periods of time. And the air goes all wavy ahead of the car from the haze and the heat.
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