Draft poem in honor of April, National Poetry Month.
Sparrow Dreams
I dreamt, years ago, that my infant child was a sparrow.
My husband, just last night, dreamt of a huge pooled grill
upon which customers threw raw steaks.
He also dreams of flying.
I rarely remember my dreams now–I don’t know if I can’t
hold onto them, or if I just don’t have them. But I
dreamt, years ago, that I cupped the small brown bird,
who was my child,
inside my palms.
My husband dreams always, exciting scenarios. Khaddafi makes
a house call; my husband disarms him while
lecturing on the merits of Debussy.
My mother once led, with great difficulty, a horse
down long dark stairs
only to find at the sweaty stoop
a sign that read, “Elevator For Horses
Only.” Close to ninety, she still tells
that dream, but the words sometimes change:
“Horses Shouldn’t Take Stairs.”
My husband likes to tell his when he first wakes;
the surface of his sleep-furred eyes glisten
with the fantastical.
I sat holding my softly-feathered child on a bench
of women before sculptured green. It was
Rockefeller Center, I remember, and that suddenly
I seemed to have put her down, my sparrow child, then
weeping, could not find her.
It was before her birth–when you are pregnant,
you have many dreams–but I knew, when I woke,
that my life was forever different,
that I had been given a fragile, marvelous, chance, a chance
I could not grip tightly (even though it might take flight),
but that I could not bear to lose, not ever.
As always, all rights reserved.
And also, as always, please feel free to let me know comments or suggestions. This is a draft, and it would be wonderful to have guidance as to how to improve it.

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