Dream Tigers
The Dream Tigers came again last night.
They breathed on my face, taking my air away.
Their feet are so huge, they never sink
into the featherbed.
Some nights I don't know they're there,
but on the nights when they feel hungry
they nibble at my fingers, swallowing
the tips like cherries. I can't ignore them then.
I smell them when the air is heavy with fog or mist,
and I try to lie so still they'll pass me by as they
prowl, searching for something new to eat.
My cherry fingertips grow back. The Dream Tigers
know this, timing their voracious night walks to
coincide with a fresh crop. I tried sleeping in a tree,
but they climbed better than I, and knocked me to the
ground to teach me a lesson. They reminded me then
of my evil stepmother, who beat me black and blue,
but never where it showed.
The Dream Tigers know the cherry tips of my fingers
are ignored by others, and laugh at me for caring
so much whether I can push a button to light the room;
or write a letter asking to be rescued from them.
They know they are supreme in the Land of Night,
where Anything can happen, and sometimes does.
I want to run away from the Dream Tigers, but
they're faster than I am, and I fear that if I annoy
them too much, they'll eat my legs instead, and I'll
be there, smelling them, and listening to them
rumbling as their appetites sharpen, finally eating
until I never grow back again.
A. Murray
Based on a dream told to me by Richard Sellers.
2 comments:
In the last such dream I awoke in a darkened room. I had a plastic tub of nuts and bolts and washers on my chest which spilled when I sat up. I got down on my hands and knees in the dark, feeling around for the hardware. A kitten attacked my hand. I couldn't see it but could easily tell what it was, fur and teeth.
Rufus
You really captured it, Tiger dreams. Thank you.
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