Word-Shopping, Part I by Julie Allyn Johnson

I’m a chimera,

I think,

though its meaning

is not yet known to me.

 

Even its pronunciation

falters inside my brain.

 

I want a SHIM-er-ah

sound to describe

who I am,

my perceived fancy,

my joie de vivre.

 

But my head is not

that of a lion.

Neither fire nor flames

sustain me.

I haven’t any tail.

No frame of goat.

 

I’m no illusion,

no one’s longing

ill-fated and shunned.

 

Just the one set of DNA:

I am no surviving twin.

 

Pegasus is agnostic

of my existence.

 

No monster, am I.

Though my behavior

is monstrous at times.

 

[Flips the page]

 

Chimney sweep, n. a person whose job is cleaning out the soot from chimneys.

 

Well.        Well, well, well.

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Julie Allyn Johnson

Julie Allyn Johnson is a sawyer's daughter from the American Midwest whose current obsession is tackling the rough and tumble sport of quilting and the accumulation of fabric. A Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net nominee, her poetry can be found in Star*Line, The Briar Cliff Review, Phantom Kangaroo, Lyrical Iowa, Moss Piglet, Cream Scene Carnival, Coffin Bell, The Lake, Haikuniverse, Chestnut Review and other journals. Julie enjoys photography and writing daily haiku, both of which can be found on her blog, A Sawyer’s Daughter.

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