100 Greatest Poems by A . E Housman - HTML preview

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The Tiger in the Driveway

has escaped the carousel and stands chained

 

to the trunk of a dogwood in the suburbs

 

fourteen miles from New York. Bright

 

in his new coat of paint, his stripes

 

blend with the mix of light and shade,

 

his likeness, and only slightly less dangerous.

 

Across the street, nearly hidden

 

in dense brushy rhododendron, a bronze swan

 

glimmers in dots of light like rain or little mirrors, like medallions. When the light’s right they reflect

 

the tiger, broken into pieces, flattened, tamed. She doesn’t like to hear his panting on hot days

 

but senses how the chain beneath his chin

 

chafes skin. Sympathy like light wind

 

cannot stir her feathers, weighted with metal. Nights she imagines his slide silent as shadow

 

to the beds upstairs. Driven out (he is always driven out), he dreams it’s possible to slip

 

behind the stove or fridge; he spits

 

like a house-cat when the woman sprinkles water

 

on the grass and wets his clothes. He misses his little blue jacket but not the saddle’s

 

golden tassels and gilt trim, and he longs for music, but not the children climbing and patting.

 

On long summer afternoons he might doze

 

in the shade of the garage where blades and spokes,

 

old bikes and broken mowers, gleam beneath coats of grime and dust, brown furry frosting. He is manifest

 

desire and drips like bitten peaches, plums; tigers.

His fine eyes shine with bleak intelligence and blink in all that dark, and then he stretches, pink tongue curling. His breast heaves. Bars bow:

he is potential mouth and froth and leap,

 

brings smells like meat, the scent of mud from rivers

 

with him, bruises, streaks of old abrasions, chunks of carrion and traces of wild grasses,

 

memories of fatty thighs of swans, their gorgeous splayed black paddlefeet. © Deena Linett