"The Sleepers" by Derek JG Williams

The Sleepers


The kitchen table wants to be a chair. It’s tired 
of standing still all the time, 

it wants to swipe the floor with its paws 
and be stood on to change light bulbs and help 

paint the walls a darker shade of green. 
It wants a little bit of paint to drip across its back 

so it can be green too. It’s tired of carrying 
the weight of dead things. 

Nothing speaks when the knives by the sink get angry. 
It’s been years since they’ve been 

sharpened. It’s hard to debone chicken 
with blades so dull. The knives complain to an army 

of ugly country tile, but it’s not listening. 
It daydreams at night, imagining the smell 

of its flowers blooming in the spring, how beautiful 
each petal would be if it spread in more 

than two dimensions. The dripping faucet only recently 
explained what three dimensions are— 

and the living room carpet is disgusted by all 
this dreaming. This is serious, it thinks; we are serious, 

it says. But the carpet wants to be a chandelier. 
One night when it was lonely, it almost told 

the doorknob its secret. If it had three wishes 
it would say, I want to be a chandelier. I want to be 

a chandelier. I want to be a chandelier to feel the pretty tug 
of so much crystal and have my many lights turned 

on off on. It wants to be best friends with 
the light switch. It doesn’t want to be forced 

to talk dirty to the vacuum cleaner just because 
it’s clever, because it has leverage and is clever. 

The sounds you hear at night are not 
what your parents told you, not the house 

settling on its foundation, not possums in the backyard 
rooting though trash. They are the murmur 

of all these desires rustling like silk. 
Mingling with the sleeping dreams of children 

who want to be adults, adults who want 
to be children. 

ξ

"The Sleepers" first appeared in Bellingham Review.

Derek JG Williams is an American poet and essayist. He is the author of Poetry Is a Disease, forthcoming from Greying Ghost Press. He holds a doctorate in English and Creative Writing from Ohio University, and an MFA from the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Derek teaches writing courses online and develops curricula for GrubStreet. His poems and prose are published or forthcoming in Pleiades, DIAGRAM, Plume, Best New Poets, Adroit Journal, The Rumpus, Prairie Schooner, Salamander, and on Boston's MBTA trains as a part of the city's Poetry on the T program. He lives in Germany with his wife and dog. Learn more about him at http://www.derekjgwilliams.com/.


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