Dalton Day
Stepping Out of Sorrow
I’m a girl with a wolf’s heart.
I’m stepping out of sorrow.
The house collapses.
Either an insect or my mother or
the still-sweet ghosts of lilies
come to collect me.
My head carries the sound of
tap-dancing through puddles. One
slow stab of wonder until I get
to sleep again. They let me
go in the woods. I think the trees
are firework taxidermy. A steady
reminder of celebration and
light. How quiet. I’m a collaps-
ing house. Come collect me.
I’m stepping out of sorrow.
Everything else is left howling.
Brontide
Please, don’t laugh at me I say
to them. They are huge white animals
and they are tiny. Tiny as
fingernails. Huge as all my memories
concerning water. Actually, I’m at the
grocery store. I’m buying eggs and I’m cold.
Do you remember the myth
in which Zeus turns into a swan because
he is such a terrible son-of-a-bitch?
In spite of that, I still trust
birds. Because of that, I assume
birds are more than they say they are.
Actually, I’m in the biggest
body of water ever discovered. I’ve
just told the funniest joke in the entire
history of wildness. Only, I don’t know this.
My two favorite souvenir’s are a leaf that my cousin gave me for my birthday when she was three years old, & a pair of tiny shoes my girlfriend brought me from Holland.
Dalton Day is an editor for FreezeRay Poetry. His poems have appeared in Hypothetical, Former People, and Rufous City Review, among others. He can be found at myshoesuntied.tumblr.com and on Twitter @lilghosthands.