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Dandelion by Danny Cassidy

He rips the crown from the stem
so that white cream
leaks from the torn neck,
which he dabs and rubs on my wrist
where a bee has just stung.

Beyond the pain
I try to imagine the beauty
beneath my pierced skin,
a garden of signals flickering
like fireflies in trembling branches.

The horizon hangs open
like a mouth with hunger.
The last of the day’s light drools
down on the blue grass.

I thought my self a weed,
a festering declaration,
never asking What ease
can I give the pain of this world?

Now I’ll remember this.
Small gestures.
His thumb circling my skin,
and, under it,
the bright sting singing.

thq-feather-sm

Danny Cassidy lives and writes in Queens, NY. He is a Rutgers University graduate, where he received the Academy of American Poets' Enid Dame Memorial Prize for Poetry and the Evelyn Hamilton Award in Poetry. Recent work has appeared in Counterclaim Review.