The Knicknackery Issue Two - 2014 | Page 28

Jillian Blackwell

A Handful of Precipices

If the tea whistles

ghostly pale in my cup

If my face underlit by lamplight and yours

upside down

these diver gulps of tea

I would be playing piano music as loudly as possible

my fourth floor fire escape door open

the cliff of the building

the sun that sets farther down Sansom street

pink flushed against the building across

The plants all killed on the windowsill

but the onion I found in the refrigerator grown up like a tulip

My room arranged by rectangles, with no worthwhile window

my fitted bed sheet curled up at the corners, its tired brown flowers

Cezanne apples spoiling on your table

a round red apple forgotten at the bottom of my bag,

so disappointing at the first bite

My lips at the empty space between your two eyebrows and your nose

cold in April still, my apartment floor cold

I, without a plan

fingernails uneven, useless as a purple cabbage

this colander month, if I hadn’t

slipped through each day

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