* First: The blinding of the citizens Second: The common plague of worms (like lute strings, they must be plucked and the wounds spread with fresh butter) Then: This amorousness * Old woman cried and was fed her peas— a worm in mud finding its way around my roots— or deeply asleep and thus resistant to being read as a morally triumphant being, she buries her mirror The sermon says, "there is no you, so no way for you to fail or fall" In Normandy we bought fish and cake and the children rode the carousel These are the dreams we return to: bread in the sun, oil in the water glass in the foot Blood modifies blood * "Let me be my own fool," sitting on the newspaper perchance in love with an embryonic heart prepared to beat 2.5 billion times, and that's all * Nothing betray us But I love the moment when the boy looks down at a homeless man's shoe and imagines traveling to the center of the earth, hanging on the shoelace like a rope
Copyright © 2010 by Julie Carr. Used by permission of the author.