Wednesday, January 20, 2016

January 20 -- Sarah Thursday

Unnamed Color
 
If I were a painter, I'd find the darkest
blue paint—thick as gravy—
push it slow across a powder-white
canvas, diagonal edge to edge,
let the ridges and valleys of the stroke
seep into a settled mass. I'd drag
the brush saturated in blue past
the easel, over my window pane
across my pale green wall
and onto my bed frame. I'd shape
the prints of my hands where I held
myself above you. Where I saw
you under me like a child, like one
who never married, never had children,
never worked twenty years in the same
company, never had to harden his heart
like police armor. I'd paint
the color of your eyes—
if they could ever be captured
in a shade made by man.
 
 

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