laying bare what was heretofore unknown, I’ll bet you’d be as amazed as I at a stingray skeleton, cartilaginous and regal. All that internal structure feathers out where flesh once glided through, around, the plume of framework. It looks like an intricate headdress meant to adorn the pate of a king or a queen in a country that depends so much upon the sea, that inner architecture, those leftover pieces able to lie in stasis for millions of years, turn to stone under drifts of sediment. We keep digging them up like memories. We use chisels to chip away the past, brushes to sweep away bygone dust. Nothing could be as radiant as these divergent quills. Think of them, if you will, furling in waves, moving the body that must eventually relinquish.
I sigh
with knowledge of fire and desire,
which are
sometimes one and the same. You
are one
of those naked gods at odds with
each other,
all rustle and tussle. I’d love to know
whatever
possessed you to reach into clay
and create
humankind, run your hands across
every body
to give it life. No wonder you mean
so much
to me, all that intimacy at your finger-
tips. Why
don’t you touch me now like it’s the
beginning
of the world? I vow to accept the inferno
you bring,
lightning, flint rock, that odd two-stick
trick of friction,
smolder, spark, and flame. I know
I sound
promiscuous, wound up with passion
for your intellect,
your prankster ways. I don’t know
what’s wrong
with me, always falling for your chiseled
good looks,
made of marble, me of clay. Every day
I fantasize
about running my fingers through your
locks ablaze,
my hands scorched in your tangles. Every
rendition,
a cloth dangles across your leg and over
your conflagration.
I wish I’d been there to tend your injuries,
under chains
not even a god could escape, that eagle
leaving you
agape on that rock of punishment. I doubt
it will give you
any comfort, but I would have done the same.
I would have
stolen the gift of heat and light, even with
its curse.
But I’ve never had to endure an eternity
of torture,
an infinity of screaming at the heavens.
I could
bring you ointments and salves, tinctures
and elixirs,
but these can only soothe your flesh, when
what you need
is a moment of forethought, which is not
something
I can provide. The sun is risen once again,
and the eagle
is ready to tear into your side. If I could
make love
to you and take away your pain, I would
bring you
that firestorm, a pyre built upon fennel,
which is
what brought us here, wisdom, wildfire.
With Burning
Infatuation,
Red-tunic breast, blue-scarfed head, yellow-epaulet shoulders, the painted bunting looks as though it sprung from a child’s imagination, those primary colors smeared upon a canvas. The sun is a flower in the eastern corner. Branches angle in from the edge, implying a tree just out of sight. Smoky swirls drift cumulus over pale watercolor stripes of sky. A band of green is the earth. You can see, in places, where the sky and the earth thinly overlap. Refrigerators all over town become aviaries for resplendent wings. Not a masterpiece, but showy, imagine a flock in the wild, their piccolo songs looping through leaves. Listen closely, you can hear insects whir and buzz and chatter, a chorus to tell the story of children who disappeared from here with their paintings of birds.
with black wings, scarlet honeyeater, looking like you got caught. Have you been thieving the sweetest nectar again? I’m reminded of the Lotus Eaters, how luxury is its own addiction, how the practical world crumbles when it is neglected. What do you neglect? Not these shaggy blossoms. Not these fringes where beauty resides. Do you wait until dew rises from leaves, or are you constantly compelled toward that syrupy ambrosia? Did you know you were partaking of the food of the gods? Don’t worry, they no longer sup of earthly concerns. Perhaps I was wrong, and you are red with anger, burning all over. Or maybe you are so filled with desire your feathers take on a lusty tint. I’m going to fly home to my love, to the nest we share in this life, where we can whisper our affections, make the gods regret they ever left us, this long, alone.
David B. Prather is the author of WE WERE BIRDS from Main Street Rag Publishing (2019). His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Prairie Schooner, Cutthroat: A Journal of the Arts, Poet Lore, Colorado Review, The Literary Review, and many others. He studied acting at the National Shakespeare Conservatory in New York, and he studied writing at Warren Wilson College in North Carolina. He lives in Parkersburg, West Virginia.
The Los Angeles Alligator Farm (ca. 1907.) From 1907 until its relocation in 1953, the area of Lincoln Heights was home to what the Los Angeles Times dubbed “the city’s most exotic residents”–a thousand-strong collection of alligators that welcomed visitors every day of the year to see, pose with, and even ride them. Alligator postcard (1910s)from Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas. From Public Domain Review