By Clara Mae Barnhart
At sunset in Burlington the power lines are golden like the afterglow of sparklers when children twirl them in the air. A frayed ribbon of sunlight stretches out onto Lake Champlain. You can feel the energy thrumming, see it light up people’s eyes.
When I was a child I liked to squint at street lamps at night because it makes them look like eight-pointed stars. We walked around late in our little village. In the summer we would dodge the toads on the sidewalk in the soft copper glow. Our cat would follow us everywhere. She would dash in front of cars for fun, a streak of Calico in the muted headlights under lamps buzzing with May flies.
My mother and her father once had a conversation about the afterlife. She said, “When you go you need to find a way to let me know when you’re around.”
Clara Barnhart’s work has been published or forthcoming in The Timberline Review, Negative Capability Journal, Louisiana Literature, and The Comstock Review, among others. She has been nominated for an AWP intro award and has been the recipient of an Academy of American Poets College Prize and the Willard & Maple Poetry award.
Photo “Sunset” provided by Andy Fridman, via Flickr.com creative commons license.
0 Comments