The Art of Sideways
Northern hemisphere
it’s almost Christmas.
Sunlight withdrawing
into its darkest shell of green
coils ring by
ring like a yellow snake in a tight burrow.
The snake’s sleep
maps an origin pinpoints the
start
of where morning lies — its polished skin a simple clock
turning every so often
leaving a scaled topography
behind.
But just as rain can fall sideways and eyes look aslant
might a northern winter
not widen light in the same way
a snake exceeds its
skin?
Last summer I stood
over a sheath of snake in the bush.
The tail tapered the
head was marked with the shape
and angle of
invisible eyes.
It could have been a hairnet or a ghost but it was quieter than that.
It could have been laid out
across a plate of vine leaves.
A seamstress could have used it as tulle a fisherman as netting
the desert salt as
cracks.
Trees are empty on the sidewalk their fallen leaves layered
and overlapping like
shelves of ancient papyruses.
One tree casts a long shadow two arms striking upwards
as though piqued by
pavement light.
Between the shadow lying flat and still and the tree standing
long and tall there
is an angle of forty-five degrees.
There is Icarus
falling from blue to
decimal to amber.
The distance between north
and south is mapped
with the shape and
angle of his eyes.
The snake’s skin is colorless his eye invincible.
The winter light is warm
piercing darkness radiating
a trajectory that points in all directions.
Claire Potter
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