Robbie Gamble
Tadpoles
At this point in the life-cycle
the pond is a quivering suspension
of commas, thousands upon
ten-thousands of them.
I am graceless
as a swimmer, plowing
through their punctuations
as they slither off
my flailing limbs
in rubbery innuendos,
my every stroke deployed
like a subordinate clause.
If I could but grow a tail
as they are growing legs
then we would undulate
into a common language,
a choreography as thrilling
as the first lustful song of the spring
peepers emerging from sediment
once their antifreeze-protected hearts thaw.
Swimming is exhausting, but so
is survival, and sex is exhilarating, as is
singing in the choir, also crossing the road
without getting smushed by a pickup tire.
I am so enamored
with my current mate.
We met on land,
and there we learned
a musical coda is a tail
tacked on, propelling us together
as we modulate through
this balmy sonic wonderland.
Back to Issue IX…
Robbie Gamble is the author of A Can of Pinto Beans from Lily Poetry Review Press. His poems have appeared in Atlanta Review, Lunch Ticket, RHINO, Spillway, and The Sun. He divides his time between Boston and Vermont.