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May 2nd: Inhuman Movements by Alexandria Dobkowski

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Thalassophilia

Thalassophilia

In the night the water moves
Unfurls like a flag under the pressure
Of the wind; curls like the spine
Of a retreating snake
In the night the black water
A perfect mirror a deep deep portal
The shimmer of dreams the depth
Of temptation under a quavering

In the night the water moves
In the night I move with it

The water is darker than the sky
Look up and see galaxies
Where will I come from do you think
When I swim by and yank
You under; how will you move
In the night in the water
The dark dark water moving
Like a flag like a snake

In the night the water moves
In the night I move with it

In the Night Forest

In the Night Forest

On the best nights, you need nothing
You can rest against your pack
Atop moss spotted granite
Awash in moonlight and the sounds
Of gently creaking pine, the forest
Keeping its own atavistic time

On the best nights you can breathe
Under the dizzying gaze of an array
Of stars whose light was ancient
When the stone beneath was young
And yet you can, in this brief existence
Perceive it all: light, life, night, earth

On the best nights, there under the sky
No pressing need for a tent’s canopy
The immensity of the night forest
Bears witness to our entwined minds
Those bygone suns mirrored in sparks
Sweeping between your soul and mine

Alexandria Dobkowski

Alexandria is a 51 year old writer who has been creating and publishing poetry since childhood. Deeply rooted in the natural world, she has recently traded the forests and coastlines of Maine for those of Washington–which she describes as “like Maine, but through a Studio Ghibli filter”. Her poetry bridges dreams and landscapes, mythology and memory–layering her almost-scientific observations with mysticism, passion , and humor.