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Issue 82
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Devi / Ali
- Colin Bailes
- Emily Banks
- Parcerisas / Cassells
- Laura Dixon
- Odio / Ekiss
- Isaac Ginsberg Miller
- Donnelly / Miller
- Mitchell Glazier
- Jessica Goodfellow
- Grotz / Sommer Translations
- Todd Kaneko
- Keineg / Marris
- Elizabeth Onusko
- Colin Pope
- Karen Poppy
- Candiani / Portnowitz
- Elizabeth Ai Powell
- Mike Puican
- Anthony Tao
- Angela Narciso Torres
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BOOK REVIEW
- David Rigsbee reviews Swift: New & Selected Poems
by David Baker
- David Rigsbee reviews Swift: New & Selected Poems
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ESSAY
Issue > Poetry
Sad Human Voice
Often my attention falls on people and objects
without my conscious awareness
and suddenly I'll be seconds-deep into studying
the curve of a sleeping infant's eyelashes
or the sculptural qualities of a tissue
partly pulled out of a box
before perceiving what I'm seeing.
Most beauty, like most pain,
is small and unacknowledged.
The thought used to make me cry.
Not anymore. When I want to, I can't.
I miss the endorphins.
The faint tightness of tears drying on my cheeks.
The sense of resolution
though nothing changed.
I last wept months ago
during a commercial for an animal rescue charity.
Dogs pawed at cages
while a sad human voice whispered
Set me free
and repeated a 1-800 number.
Earlier that day, I'd stopped at a red light near a raceway.
In front of me was a trailer.
A muzzle was visible between the metal slats.
Like most things I find upsetting,
I delayed reckoning with it
for as long as my body would allow.
I haven't sobbed since, not even the next morning in the park
when I came across a carriage horse
whose eyes were tainted wells.
No one else noticed them,
least of all the people in the carriage
taking pictures of foliage with their phones.