The highway's edge of unmalicious deaths plays counterpoint against the radio's theme. In Utah and Nevada, rabbits' white fur sloughs off the pavement like the nap of cheap velvet while I am told Bob Marley's head is pillowed by his dreadlocks' tightly harrowed rows. Great white pillars of plain bereft of roof - the columns of grain elevators shade an owl which, blood glued to the pavement, waves one wing to passing cars containing the report, indifferent as the trapped fly's buzzing voice, that the Pope's been shot while blessing multitudes. I did not take personally the legs of a Pennsylvania deer that, stiff as fence posts, staked out the belly pregnant with death's gases until, my radio off and parked in Brooklyn, a neighbor leaned into the car to announce my father's death, and I thought perhaps if I'd turned it off before I might have heard. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LONG WHITE SEAM by JEAN INGELOW ON A PICTURE OF LEANDER by JOHN KEATS TO THE UNKNOWN EROS: BOOK 1: 3. WINTER by COVENTRY KERSEY DIGHTON PATMORE THE BURNING BABE by ROBERT SOUTHWELL THIS COMPOST: 1. by WALT WHITMAN TRUTH AND SORROW by PHILIP JAMES BAILEY FIRST NEWS FROM VILLAFRANCA by ELIZABETH BARRETT BROWNING THE NEW MOON by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT THE WANDERER: 1. IN ITALY: A VISION by EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON |