ERICA WRIGHT is the author of Instructions for Killing the Jackal (Black Lawrence Press, 2011). Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Blackbird, Denver Quarterly, Drunken Boat, From the Fishouse, New Orleans Review, and elsewhere. She is the Poetry Editor at Guernica Magazine and teaches creative writing at Marymount Manhattan College. She hails from Wartrace, Tennessee.
Reviews: http://thescrapperpoet.wordpress.com/2010/05/29/saturday-silt/ http://www.neonmagazine.co.uk/reviews/silt.htm
Woolgathering
If I could make my mind up about love, I might leave this life for another, cross borders into dark, difficult terrain, leave my mark upon the soil for a chance at a living room, a room like any other marred from life.
If Blake were alive to illustrate, he'd skip the city and head straight for the outskirts where grays begin to glow olive then hunter then lime. That's where the women are, leaving so much behind for kitchens hot with appliances.
If big cats stalked the ramparts of the suburbs, I'd like it more there, let them sleep in my yard with the tabby and Irish wolfhound. If damage stayed localized. If men warred for sport. If cul-de-sacs. If sedatives. If by the bucket.
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