Monday, June 13, 2022

New Poetry by Adrienne Pilon










First Season

It's all happened before: this sunshine, this renewal.
Tumbleweeds of pollen roll across the deck, the lawn
leaving a bile-colored dust. Heedless carpenter bees
coming out for their first look at spring bump against
the windows and siding of the house, over and over,
sometimes to the death. The robins are in a frenzy 
of overwork brought on by hatchling season, zooming
in and out of the blooming rhododendron; sometimes
on their high-speed returns they smash into the 
reflected bush of the glass.I shovel up their bodies,
toss them over the fence. The foxes will eat them,
and they'll eat the bees, too along with vegetable peelings
I've used to dress the corpses. The sun shines like a curse.
Termites crawl from the windowsills as I wash off the robins' blood.
From the rhododendron comes the endless peeping of fledglings.


- © Adrienne Pilon 2022


Adrienne Pilon is a teacher, writer, and editor. She lives in North Carolina and sometimes California. Recent work appears in Eclectica, Plum Tree Tavern, Uppagus and elsewhere. 

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