Neanderthal

Neanderthal
by Ron Salisbury

After four, downward roll of us toward morning, coldest part of night just before the great fires stoke our souls, I finally sleep. That sleep that drools so deep below worry that most sounds won’t wake as they would earlier when I twist on that pallet of nails, potato field mattress. Why? Some snip, vestige ghost still left of DNA stands watch. Teeth and claw beyond the fire’s edge. Again the westward rim ate that flaming egg, spewed its peach and red insides along that ragged line. What am I to do if there is never light again. How will we eat? Or see? What’s a man to do, the car needs tires, mortgage, taxes, everything is due. Then the warming east, the wash, shimmer, the lightening load. The plant of sleep come sprout again, that drool, as worry, claw and tooth, the egg, that egg at dawn lets hold of him.

 


Ron Salisbury was the winner of the 2015 Main Street Rag Poetry Prize for his book, Miss Desert Inn and the inaugural Poet Laureate, San Diego 2020-2021. His second book, Please Write and Tell Me What I Looked Like When You Met Me, was published in 2023 by Wholon.

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