Tuesday, April 26, 2016

#110 Kevin Brophy 'Aphorisms for the idle'

The more poisonous our home becomes
the more beautiful will be the cures provided for us.

We know from the faces of its workers at the end
of each day, that the factory deals only in the truth.

The sand harbours scorpions and barbed seeds.
The stones harbour the absence of a heartbeat.

When your books are standing up tight in their shelves
they’re judging each other by the covers and blurbs.

The tiny white aeroplane carrying six hearts sputters out across a vast desert.
The vast desert can think only of vastness, a last and lasting thought held.

The more poisonous our home becomes

the more poignant is the art on its walls.

1 comment:

  1. Is the poison a metaphor, or is it real?
    This poem is full of great lines, as usual.

    ReplyDelete

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