Deborah Ager

Here you will find the Poem Night: San Francisco of poet Deborah Ager

Night: San Francisco

Rain drenches the patio stones. 
All night was spent waiting 
for an earthquake, and instead 

water stains sand with its pink foam. 
Yesterday's steps fill in with gray crabs. 
Baritone of a fog horn. A misty light 

warns tankers, which block the green 
after-sunset flash. My lover's voice calls 
to others in his restless sleep. 

The venetian blinds slice streetlights, 
light coils around my waist and my lover's neck, 
dividing him into hundredths. 

Would these fractions make me happier? 
My hands twist into a crocodile. 
My index finger the tooth that bites 

Gauguin's Tahiti. My thumb is the head feather 
of a California quail crying chi-ca-go. 
Night barely continues. Is this the building 

staying still? Is this hand the scorpion 
that will do us in? A few of Irving Street's 
sycamores will blue the air come morning.