The Sleeping Peacock

Amit Parmessur hails from the heavenly island of Mauritius. Now 28 years old, he has been writing for the past 8 years. His work has appeared at places including Ann Arbor ReviewCalliope NerveCensored PoetsLeaf GardenYes PoetryClockwise CatPuffin CircusGloom CupboardHeavy Hands InkMad SwirlShot Glass Journal, and The Houston Literary Review. Visit his ezine.

The Sleeping Peacock
By Amit Parmessur

I discovered a majestic peacock
lying comatose in my littered backyard,
with wet fingerish twigs on its neck.
I took it home and colors spilled
onto my hands and poured into
my eyes as I wiped at teardrops.
I placed the peacock on my bed,
talking it back to life, stroking
its sleeping rainbows, its inert fan
of moist quills.

A few perfect circles were drawn
on the bedsheet as the bird tried
to stir and open its eyes. The night
was black when it died.

Every day I now dream of huge 
peacocks pecking at my heart,
the weight of the birds pushing
me into the colorful abyss opening
in my bed; my cries killed by bloody
fingers creeping around my parched throat.

 

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