Featured Writer: Davide Trame

Chinks of Sky

(Skibbereen)

 

Memory clings to luminous imperfections,

mistakes made one day

that persist in the light,

as those dark red shoes I had bought,

too big but so glossy and good for the rain,

I had at once seen the Irish wet days

brightened, vanquished by them,

I thought I wouldn't mind

to be slightly off balance, to feel my feet

just a bit heavy.

So we walked fifteen miles the next day,

the fat stormy clouds sailing gaily,

the wet winter short grass lightened from within,

a horizon of shiny slopes glistening

after the upteenth tearing shower

and skinny soggy branches pointing

at a long crack in the clouds like a blue highway;

we walked on and passed by the reeds of a shivering inlet,

a heron glanced in the shaking wind gusts,

we had disturbed its silent stalking tasks

in the air that was cold with a breath of red luster

mirrored by my Doc Martens,

the hills and plains a fierce open hand

and my ankles bursting.

On the way back I remembered the hard road inch by inch,

the wind on our back and the sparse raindrops

full of evening redness, with a warm gaze

despite the threatening Atlantic hail.

Back home I threw the shoes away,

they definitely did not fit me

but the segments of vacant space

my feet felt inside them

 

still hang in my breath,

chinks of an enduring sky, a furious

god's smile.

 

 

 

Trespassing

 

Two children have just jumped

down the fence into the private enclosure

of the bungalows behind the beach;

they look at you through the net,

eyes quick, slightly diffident, amused:

"We have done it, so what?"

 

In an instant they are away,

you hear stamping feet

on the patch of immaculate green

and the distant, quiet roar of the sea.

Neatness of trespassing steps,

you are taken by the sudden nostalgia

for all the things that could be,

you relish the thrill in your throat,

your breath smuggled into an eternity

where you have always longed for being caught.

 

 

Davide Trame is an Italian teacher of English living in Venice. His poems have appeared in magazines since 1999: International Poetry Review, Salzburg Poetry Review, Diner, Orbis, Chaffin Journal, Stand and others.


Email: Davide Trame

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