On this Porch and in the Weeds
By David Pring-Mill
The twisting print of a sandal
settles blackly on the edge of one square tile. Skewing every direction,
wildly, a mat of Palmyra
fibers awaits gunk, with
deliberate teeth, synthesized to this task by man and industry and conformed to
mat. Black mosquito
screens enclose these little
Florida porches. Dripping down over tanned forehead, beads of sweat escape and
are expelled by
the back of my hand, as I wait
to be welcomed, lost in this peninsula of sprouting highways, fractured strip
malls, droplets of
oil exploding beautifully onto
asphalt. Porcelain angels decorate the tiles near my sandals, and lizards cling
onto angelic
faces, and a pulsing, fiery
dewlap distinguishes the male pumping blood through a body quick and agile,
with those reptilian
eyes complacent and erratic.
If this brown anole ever meets a predator, it will part with itself, and
continue on, undeterred with
a bloody stump; a kinetic,
slithering, and twitching tail left behind, like a souvenir for the bird. And
with eyes of unknown
properties, tired wrinkles,
well-defined grooves, tinted bifocals, and a resigning amount of slicked back,
thinning white hair, the
widowed old man answers his door, having shuffled over
after I rang his doorbell and pierced the silence of his home with a
friendly, intrusive chime that
surely resonates, through all those cloudy memories stirring gently under the
bluest of skies. He
recognizes me, and feels the humid air flooding in, and on
this porch and in the weeds, a Floridian day somehow slips through
the collective presence, with
creatures and people fumbling after time, parting with pieces of their souls
along the way, kinetic
and slithering.
Poet's Notes:
I spent a lot of my childhood
in Florida. This is a prose poem about the imagery of that state.
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