POETRY October 4, 2024

Gall

A dainty, speckled orb, a subtle fig,

pink as the pith of an idea, a plum

gall sheds shocking purple blood when cut.

You stain your palm wondering where it’s from.

You peer up into sieving green. Ripe nuts

crack beneath your boot. You take a twig

and pry; a larva, fishbelly-white and stiff,

tumbles from the core of purple flesh.

Its larval stillness, sheer and cold, is the stuff

of fear. It chases you into sleep like a wish.

That night, you envision every fruit on earth

buzzing, cracking open to release streams

of wasps. You must expect some awful birth

from every ripe, inviting, gentle dream.

Forester McClatchey is a poet and critic from Atlanta, GA. His work appears in 32 Poems, Gulf Coast, and The Hopkins Review, among other journals. He teaches at Atlanta Classical Academy.
Social media: X @fhmcclatchey; Instagram @forestermcclatchey