Moths by Jennifer O'Grady

 
Adrift in the liberating, late light
 
of August, delicate, frivolous,
 
they make their way to my front porch
 
and flutter near the glassed-in bulb,
 
translucent as a thought suddenly
 
wondered aloud, illumining the air
 
that's thick with honeysuckle and dusk.
 
You and I are doing our best
 
at conversation, keeping it light, steering clear
 
of what we'd like to say.
 
You leave, and the night becomes
 
cluttered with moths, some tattered,
 
their dumbly curious filaments
 
startling against my cheek. How quickly,
 
instinctively, I brush them away.
 
Dazed, they cling to the outer darkness
 
like pale reminders of ourselves.
 
Others seem to want so desperately
 
to get inside. Months later, I'll find
 
the woolens, snug in their resting places,
 
full of missing pieces.  

~ from White (Mid-list Press, 1999)
Previous
Previous

You Are There by Erica Jong

Next
Next

Lost by David Wagoner