“Love, Under a Falling Sky” A Poem By Megan Pinto (poetry ’18)
Say Chicken Little was right, that the sky is falling. What I want to know is, will the moon fall too? Will it bounce softly like swiss cheese, or will it crumble like a stale cookie? Do skies bruise? Do they ache? And is the sky a metaphor for all the ills and evils of the world? A testament to how the earth can only hold so much pain and grief? But why would God send a chicken? Would you listen to a chicken? Is the chicken a metaphor for Jesus? Did the Bible mention this and somehow I missed it? Is this because in 6th grade my teacher made me promise Jesus my virginity in a gift basket? Actually, if the sky falls,
could we see God? Should we be afraid? Aren’t people already afraid? Isn’t that why people are loving on ration, and why as a child I was told to think before I touched, as if touching was not its own way of thinking? When I kiss you,
your tongue undoes reason.
The poem appeared on Lit Hub on May 22, 2020