LITMUS There will be no enemy tonight sewn into war-tights no smell of sweat and saddles in the yard no steel plates heated a dull red and no homeless children-sucking at the nipples of the under-world. No churning centipede to purify the land and sweep jets from the sky above the gates of the under-world but a dark face fallen from a cart of oranges shining in the white rain. Yet somewhere-ice bombs are thrown against the palace a pike with an alligator's head is propped in a corner of a cathedral and regiments lie naked in white grass - leaves torn from albums kept by traitors - silver bodies touched with red finality - ripped-up like books-of-hours on the ground. And bishops' crystal hats are broken in the biceps of my own sweet daughter - LITMUS my phonograph's now bleeding the white drops of her. - Lee Ballentine
Links to other sites on the Web
All rights to this poem belong to its author.