#3 (In Watermelon Sugar)

 

When the tigers were in bloom, the tigers helped me

with my arithmetic. I threw it away, so

not even time

could find it, and drank

whisky

made from forgotten things. That’s what we did

 

in those days. When the last tiger

was killed

the birds refused to fly

over the abandoned bridge. In regular glass

at the bottom of whisky

we spent a lot of time

by ourselves. Tomorrow the sun

would be black, soundless.

 

 

David Roberts is a writer, poet, artist and filmmaker who currently lives in Sheffield. His short fiction has appeared at Sein und Werden and Hoax amongst other places.  Twitter: @djohnroberts

 

 

Author’s note: This is part of an ongoing sequence, the aim of which is to distill or translate each of Richard Brautigan’s novels into a poem. Phrases have been found whole or spliced together before being shaped into poems.