‘To Keep Our Mouths So Sweetly Fed’ by Lynn Thayer

To Keep Our Mouths So Sweetly Fed

It’s dusk before I risk words,
                   their pinked softness, rosy

aromas, and though night brings
                   velvet, more flowers under anemic sky,

my verbs flatten to moony grayscale, color
                   washed from my lips like a river’s wet heap.

I pace to make my body mean something.
                   Press flushed skin against anything

cool, try to layer reserve
                   over newly threshed injury.

I know I risk more than words with you.
                   More than saying the thing I mean.

But I won’t be stolen away
                   by my body’s restless questioning,

the way she mounts a statement
                   with fervor, then curls her mouth

at the edges of it. Here, across our shared
                   pastoral, her dark meadow hints at safety,

yet treeline glints with so many eyes, lit
                   like paired forges, like felled stars,

by which to fabricate an answer.
                   Night makes you believe I’m past the hurt.

Night makes animals of us both.
                   After, a slant hymn unfurls,

foxglove and oleander
                   at the tip of my tongue



Lynn Thayer (she/her) is a multidisciplinary artist living with chronic disability in Colorado. Her work has appeared in ‘Santa Clara Review’, ‘Bicoastal Review’, ‘Wild Roof Journal’, and ‘Tendon Magazine’ among others. Her first chapbook, ‘The Augury’, was a finalist for Cathexis Northwest Press’s Unpublished Author Contest in 2025.