HEAT
What’s the use of all the sun’s gold
now that it melts into blazing lava
and singes your sweating forehead?
You wander about the city in high noon.
The streets and buildings radiate more heat
than the sun in a poor harvester’s hut.
No doubt, we all have a pining dream
of a northern land with glaciers and ice cream,
which we can’t enter awake.
Gulping for air, you think you’ll grow gills,
the dull cicadas’ song hurts you whole,
broken by blight, you’ll soon turn to ashes.
You run away and urge your steps to climb
the breath wind like a spider on a wall
and turn the page of the year’s calendar.
The horse of hunger gallops across the fields
stricken by yellow pestilence,
the udders meant for the unborn are dry wells.
Flocks of hungry prayers gather in the air
and pirouette like moving illusions –
you take them for sacks sagging with rain
from which joy’s moist breath will pour
and finally assemble the broken shadows
on earth’s wrinkled, blistering palms.

