Weekly Poetry: Wrung in the Wind

June 30, 2013

Voices, Art / Culture

Wind waggles the small oriole,
plume-bulged, through the intersection,
and he crosses off to the side:

ragged wing, swoop black –

he nicks the street near the orange jeep,
leans in half-numb, I think,
with all this strew
and whistle. Sky sails to a blue roof

on an old Suburban, and nervous dimensions
of dust in the rearview mirror. In front,
a traffic light bares to green

and our engine shudders through
the juncture as sun arcs
between the jagged air and mountains:

this feather draft, small passerine –

kinetic gold light
curving through and hurtling.




This piece was written by:

Lauren Camp's photo

Lauren Camp

Lauren Camp's newest book of poems is called The Dailiness (Edwin E. Smith Publishing) and she's the author of This Business of Wisdom (West End Press). She writes the poetry blogs Which Silk Shirt and Notes to Cecil. On Sunday evenings, she hosts “Audio Saucepan,” a global music/poetry program on KSFR 101.1FM Santa Fe Public Radio.

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