A Touch
We rinse the glasses
from which we will drink
affordable whiskey
with scotch or absinthe,
my love and I, the less than
a swallow left of good
liquor scenting the whole
cocktail. What intoxication
we afford each other
cannot be excess or impure.
*
A dried-out, overused river
runs through, or rather,
idles in, our small city
where we never intended to settle.
Birds alight on odorous pools stranded
between mudflats, a baptism
in reverse—the body that enters
proclaiming the water clean.
They dip down plumed heads
to say this is enough.
*
The pigeons, so adaptable, delight
in dropped scraps. While we—
however many lovers late in life
—rub the rims of Sazeracs
with an orange’s remaining peel,
arousing a perfume.
Copyright © 2014 by Rose McLarney. Used with permission of the author.
“Since moving to Oklahoma, and away from the rivers by which I have always oriented, I became interested in dryness—drought, dams, also prohibitions about alcohol. My morning run is along the Arkansas, a river which often holds no water at all, but somehow I have come to love seeing what is laid bare there, and, because the state sells 3.2 beer at room temperature, I have begun to make my own cocktails, another new pleasure. How strangely happy I am, so: this poem of concession.”
— Rose McLarney