The Touch of Your Hand, by Radiance Angelina Petro

 

The Touch of Your Hand

by

Radiance Angelina Petro

 

 

It’s all well and good when the whole descends

to parts, but when it happens the other way

around, all hell breaks loose.

 

The scent of my mother’s “Here’s My Heart,”

Avon Powder drifted from bedroom to hallway,

from hallway to car, from car into church,

 

and finally settled in the hymnal she handed to me.

All that just to create a void for the mass

to fall into and me with it.

 

Prior to heaven, when I parted the waterfall

in front of my cave, I believed in the holy,

and my hat had wings, and I sat with black crickets

 

as they sipped the midnight.

What does any of that even mean?

It means ghosts respond to affection,

 

and baby sea-turtles scramble to the sea,

never to feel the shore again, and most poems seek

to awaken.  This one is meant to drowse because,

 

despite previous terrors, sleep

is still the safest place, and there are ghosts

who need the touch of your hand.

 

 

 

 

 


 

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