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Issue 62
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
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FICTION
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ESSAY
Issue > Poetry
Tinnitus
They've turned the music off
and everyone's a blinking, sexy owl—
I'm loaded in the present
in a crossbow never thinking
there will be another and another machine
to throw me, and I hope
it moves me this time
in the way I always wanted. So I walk
the long hallways of the young
and understand their happiness
as physicians do the progress
of a malady: this sound, a ringing
in the ear whose reddening
reminds me how once
I comprehended not the many ways
in which things might go wrong.
That the other break of landing
hard would sound quiet, now.
Poem Without Sun
As at a station, there's waiting and its necessary
shake, but I don't notice that anymore,
not here. We sit packed tight in dry air,
static-addled, small and flammable as matches
underground. All of us red-faced in the dark.
Is this what it was like when you blushed
beneath the touch that kept you, when
he slashed the roots straining down to stroke
you as you slept? But I see now you were
less afraid, it was easier than that. The leaving,
I mean. You with your skirts always
on backwards and how you trod all over
your hems. Try as you might,
you presided, did not quite go unnoticed,
saw there was no romance in being born
beautiful. And underground you were free of
traffic, the downward tug, houses wanting locks,
fat pigeons shitting on it all. The weather
at your ear, demanding, Look look look.
Your mother must have known.