Three Poems by Junior Clemons
you can hold a newborn deer in your palm
if you place fluorescent light into the ground
you can find a chair on a busy street
and sit in it until ice forms all around you
you can wonder while walking under trees
if your pelvis and spine shine through.
you can view a list w/ milk cheese bread
and say aloud “this is our universe at its truest”
you can talk w/ the saddest ghost
if you stare at the mirror until it’s a painting
you can pretend to waltz w/ someone
and when you mess up describe it perforated
and if you soak your tongue in gold
you can save anything. yourself
(Away, March 19 2009, San Francisco)
*
i don’t want anything described as ‘sunsoaked’
i want everything described as ‘sunsoaked’
suspended wrist
do not look for orphans
but the childless
unnamed
i don’t want to be young
a spool of thread though some
remember a sword
what i’ve done to my body—
and the statue: a statue implies
something less than real / a star
brighter having known it
(After Carmen, September 23 2009, San Francisco)
*
and thinking of her
inner ear which is to say
that we are in conversation
w/ all of it and yes
it’s a cat / probably
but the list of things
that can appear outside
one’s window is infinite
and ‘sensual’
a word that is effective
without being absolutely
understood
(Club House, December 14 2009, San Francisco)
Junior Clemons received an M.F.A. in Writing from the California College of the Arts in San Francisco, CA. He received his B.A. from Pitzer College in Claremont, CA, where he studied English & World Literature, with a Writing emphasis. His first book of poems, SO MANY MOUNTAINS BUT THIS ONE SPECIFICALLY, was published by Carville Annex Press. He was born, lives and writes in San Diego, CA.
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