Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
Aug 18
I've unpacked the moon
from her nightboard box
so many times
I've worn out the ribbons.
I've hung her up
where she couldn't be missed
unless you were
watching
TV.

After a time, however
things loosen. The moon falls.
That paper crackle under the boot
is the crumpled bonesnap of
last night's hopeful crescent,
broken like a shotgun
that has two black eyes for
what it scars
and always fires blind.

So I gave up being
a moon-hanger years ago.
Now I'm retired--fallen
by the way
some say-- too tired
to lift that heavy glow
or to reach a sky that high,
but I have gotten by
by being very good at
dodging bullets.




Β©joyannjones~October 2015
Joy Ann Jones
Written by
Joy Ann Jones  76/F/Dust Bowl USA
(76/F/Dust Bowl USA)   
Please log in to view and add comments on poems