Sunday, August 10, 2008

Sunday Sonnet

SUNDAY NIGHT IN SANTA ROSA
by Dana Gioia


The carnival is over. The high tents,
the palaces of light, are folded flat
and trucked away. A three-time loser yanks
the Wheel of Fortune off the wall. Mice
pick through the garbage by the popcorn stand.
A drunken giant falls asleep beside
the juggler, and the Dog-Faced Boy sneaks off
to join the Serpent Lady for the night.
Wind sweeps ticket stubs along the walk.
The Dead Man loads his coffin on a truck.
Off in a trailer by the parking lot
the radio predicts tomorrow's weather
while a clown stares in a dressing mirror,
takes out a box, and peels away his face.


From The Penguin Book of the Sonnet, edited by Phillis Levin

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Bibliolatrist:

Thanks so much for the nomination. I apologize for not tackling this sonner, but I started another on-line class (Fiction Seminar A), and it is a bear.

Visit RabbitReader for what I did write.

--Chiron