Categories: Poetry

Winter by Charles Byrne

again, and her hair changes color with the season, first day, now night.
Eyes liner-keened, cigarette in hand, a mouth’s exhalation of Chicago
street steam. White sweeps of snow flutter over curbed piles of grey snow.
It’s a year since she furrowed her arms with a razor. A year before she’ll
try to finish her work, progressing downward. Curious fields they made,
the crooked red crop lines. I think of Cary Grant’s plane-fleeing fugue

in North by Northwest. I think: veins rooted out are at least in sight,
but below, channels are chary and while over winter. A farmer, I sluice
and wait for the front. A mockingbird’s car alarm iterations cut the silence.
She and I know winter well. Out here, in this suburban ecotone, a cold night
makes a clear night for the cutting wind. The raked fibers of her long hair
the wind ripple in the wind; freshly dyed, sour and glossy, they bleed
beyond their halo of light into the sewage-black night air before
she makes a cave of her hood and we set off together.

# # #

Charles Byrne is a teacher and poet in San Francisco, with publications in journals that include After Hours, Clarion, and Poetry Quarterly.

Photo: Bianca Berg

contact@dimeshowreview.com

Share
Published by
contact@dimeshowreview.com

Recent Posts

Pandemic Moon by Joy Mahar

Joy Mahar is an emergent writer living on the outskirts of Detroit. Her work has…

4 years ago

75 Percent by Ivy Almond

They received a much needed shower this morning: bare branches of trees, Fall's fallen crushed leaves,…

4 years ago

Aubade with Persephone by Jen Finstrom

“Persephone is having sex in hell.” –“Persephone the Wanderer,” Louise Glück This isn’t hell, but…

4 years ago

Helpless by Thomas Elson

“Again.” “Again.” “Again.” “Once more.” Her son slid down the wall onto the hallway floor.…

4 years ago

The Innocent by Vasvi Kejriwal

He told my Ma I was too young to know what a tumor felt like.…

4 years ago

Jodi’s Eyes by Stephen Banks

“Don’t leave the backyard, Jodi!” “Okay, Mommy, I won’t!” That last conversation echoed in Sarah’s…

4 years ago

This website uses cookies.