Thursday, July 20, 2023

At the End

by Sarah Dickenson Snyder

 
We turn and dream
into another exile—
bonfires, possums,
and snake-killing.
Nothing dies slowly
in dreams,
it's fold after fold
of some inscrutable map
or bobbing in a wooden skiff
on mysterious waters.
What are we finding there,
what particle of us
do we return with?
I dreamt the pharmacist
at CVS was my doctor
and she said, The baby is crowning.
How royal we are
in our dreams.
Then I was waving
from a car in a huge parade
of tickertape and celebration
for all those years
I lived.


* * * * *

Sarah Dickenson Snyder lives in Vermont, carves in stone, & rides her bike. Travel opens her eyes. She has four poetry collections, The Human Contract (2017), Notes from a Nomad (nominated for the Massachusetts Book Awards 2018), With a Polaroid Camera (2019), and Now These Three Remain (2023). Poems have been nominated for Best of Net and Pushcart Prizes. Recent work is in RattleLily Poetry Review, and RHINO
sarahdickensonsnyder.com



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