Visiting you in the hospital
                     is like going into the giraffe house,
                     to peer down into that deep pit
                     where they overwinter.
                     Your head sways towards me,
                     a map of terra incognita.
                     Your legs wade as if through the sea –
                     my clown-on-stilts, sleepwalker
                     in desert pyjamas, your eyes too soft,
                     your mouth so slack the upper jaw
                     moves away from the lower
                     like you've taken out dentures
                     but have to chew over the same word.
                     If only you could remember who this visitor is
                     high up in the viewing gallery.
                     I want to commemorate your youth
                     in the savannah, my giraffe mother.
                     I'm only passing through to shelter
                     from the cold. It's freezing outside
                     and I wanted warmth
                     but you are all the colours of drought,
                     the cracked riverbeds of your skin
                     a jigsaw no one can get right.
                     I rest my palm against the partition
                     and my breath blurs your lips, the long
                     blue tongue that keeps licking the glass.
                  From The Hippocrates Prize 2015: The Winning and Commended Poems, selected by T Dalrymple, R Gross, F Oyebode and S Rae, eds MW Hulse & DRJ Singer. The Hippocrates Press, 2015. © Pascale Petit. Reprinted with permission.
 
  
              
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