Poem of the Day
Yellow Striped Pajamas
By Shamsher Bahadur Singh
walking silently on his paws, he emerges from the semidarkness and disappears into it.
walking silently on his paws, he emerges from the semidarkness and disappears into it.
There are days I can understand
why you would want to board
broad back of some ship
I am learning how to sleep
again, to love
the descent, or is it,
lying here, a rising up
to summit
where sleep wanders
They come in many sizes—small and faint, loud and
thunderous. And it’s a problem, what to do with them,
they won’t rise up to heaven where ears have the power
It’s a strange place
to try & find
God—inside
Memory brings us back to such a place—
the rows of photinia, each leaf a red flame
(blood-tinged, almost) violent in sunlight,
In a dim room above the freightyards, next to an old brass bed, an angel is taking off his wings. He winces a little as he eases the straps that run down into his chest: the beat of the wings is the beat of the heart.
Is my dress appropriate?
Is my breath still fresh?
Will my underarms fail me?
I have the last pack of cigarettes in the world; but no matches. I am in the bedroom, which has an enormous window, so I have to keep my body between the cigarettes and the window. Everybody is in the other room with the matches. I try to think of some disguised way of asking for matches without giving away my secret.
A man rents two bears. One of the bears wears a little blue fez; on his vest is his name: ‘Bruno.’ The other bear wears a red fez. His vest says ‘Hugo.’ The man takes the bears home with him.
Like two horses
we bolted toward the limits of the earth.
Then fell