Long Exposure Magazine Issue 4, October 2016 | Page 11

Raw canvas holds

the paint with more

bite: how like a serpent’s tooth.

And how like a flicking tongue

these flat bristles taste

the intention in each stroke.

A slow delineation

of the daughter

appears unprimed

as a cell taking shape.

She complains of boredom

and fatigue having to hold

this position for what feels

like hours.

The honeyed light

thickens her voice

and sets in motion all

those orbiting motes.

Scrolled

ear and skewed

brow are brought to life

by the long afternoon’s

darkening reach.

The canvas becomes

a wordless pact between me

and the you coming

into being.

The stretched flat surface

yields to a fictional

dimension powered by primitive

impulses. Promises unfulfilled,

opportunities missed.

The nagging fixation to start

again that gnaws deep

into one’s viscera.

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