Pif Magazine - ISSN: 1094-2726
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August in Escalon 

by Jennifer Lagier
 


Here in the land of
churches and gas stations,
we move sparingly and slow
in the simmering heat.

Peach fuzz rises with the sun.
Days, over-exposed and glittering,
melt into the same twenty four hours
of recycled white noise.
Asphalt softens like canal bank mud
around concrete malls.

Outside, roses cremate
themselves colorless;
blackbirds haven't the energy
to flap or complain.

A slow freight screams,
drags itself toward the cool Pacific,
steel and grease churning
along burning rails.

I sweat, leaning into the open vents
of a straining swamp cooler,
pregnant, nineteen and newly married,
breathless in some dark corner,
wondering how the hell
we ever made it this far.





Jennifer Lagier’s work has appeared in a variety of publications, most recently in the latest issue of The Patterson Literary Review, Generation To Generation, At Our Core: Women Writing About Power, Prayers To Protest: Poems That Center And Bless Us, and New To North America: Writings By U.S. Immigrants, Their Children And Grandchildren (Burning Bush Publications, 1998), as well as several dozen others.










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