Edison Jennings lives in Abingdon, Virginia and teaches at Virginia Intermont College. His poems have appeared in Kenyon Review, Slate, Southern Review, and other journals.
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Man Dreaming of Angels
Show me an angel and I will paint one. Courbet
It's hot outside and the bedroom, not much cooler where flyspecked curtains hang limp and stain the humid air fevered yellow, and a white-haired man lies on an iron bed, sheets tossed off in classical disarray. The man, I should add, is naked. Private shamelessness or return to innocence? Certainly, he's old enough to have carried shame in a secret pocket for decades, or in the false heel of a shoe, or sewn beneath the skin, a lump of dense unstable metal bought in some black market, the zing of particulate poison titillating, like a lover's sly touch below the table of a crowded restaurant, but also old enough to have aged beyond shame's half-life, his flesh unleavened, like lead. But note the way his eyelids flutter. Should we conclude, only REM? Watch a moment more and listen. Be very still. (We'll slip out soon, he'll never know.) A soft backwash of wings mixes smell of sweat with sallow light, and a warm sweet moan hovers near at hand. Insects? birds? Feathered things, creatures of light and air that shimmer on the pale of sense and look like us, but more so.
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