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We’re tying our shoes-- as we think about the day's gifts           Holding strings-- curling ribbons with latent sweat "I’'ve heard they’ll pull us through-- we tie around each box           eyelets, through tunnels and catacombs."-- a shimmering luster abetting beyond the sky. Today we mourn those drained sausage-limbs at noon-time      --(Sallow-cheeked mistresses and fortunes abounding         for those who have time for such things.) With tears      --hiding the feelings of those who have none                   slapping the ground. We see            every unfurling light combine with blots of pity                                                  to fortify prairie grass. And I remember an old gravel highway that separates my family and church from geologic build-up which the wind is slowly chewing. I can't be with them-- like the western, sandy steppes of Nebraska,      I can't hold water, and their loving nourishment sinks through me.      My arms won't be like ribbons, in an embrace of the dead’s remitting tendrils.      As I lay outstretched on the Sand Hills, shielding my belly from the desert sun;      boring water trapped in caverns under neatly wound sweat-bows and boxes I, one day, too, cry emaciated tears.      Surely, we are tethered firmly to the spool, dangling with tensity on the tines of breath, shimmering, aloft-- but also, don’t forget: We are fastened by a knot above our leather casing      holding the body in-piece and being manipulated at once.      We decorate the boxes, in which we are to lie with wet, green ribbon, pulled through rocky soil by course, chapped hands.
0
Mar 1, 2012
Mar 1, 2012 at 2:16 AM UTC
Shoelace
We’re tying our shoes-- as we think about the day's gifts           Holding strings-- curling ribbons with latent sweat "I’'ve heard they’ll pull us through-- we tie around each box           eyelets, through tunnels and catacombs."-- a shimmering luster abetting beyond the sky. Today we mourn those drained sausage-limbs at noon-time      --(Sallow-cheeked mistresses and fortunes abounding         for those who have time for such things.) With tears      --hiding the feelings of those who have none                   slapping the ground. We see            every unfurling light combine with blots of pity                                                  to fortify prairie grass. And I remember an old gravel highway that separates my family and church from geologic build-up which the wind is slowly chewing. I can't be with them-- like the western, sandy steppes of Nebraska,      I can't hold water, and their loving nourishment sinks through me.      My arms won't be like ribbons, in an embrace of the dead’s remitting tendrils.      As I lay outstretched on the Sand Hills, shielding my belly from the desert sun;      boring water trapped in caverns under neatly wound sweat-bows and boxes I, one day, too, cry emaciated tears.      Surely, we are tethered firmly to the spool, dangling with tensity on the tines of breath, shimmering, aloft-- but also, don’t forget: We are fastened by a knot above our leather casing      holding the body in-piece and being manipulated at once.      We decorate the boxes, in which we are to lie with wet, green ribbon, pulled through rocky soil by course, chapped hands.
MMXII
sansara-justinovich
Written by
Mar 1, 2012
Mar 1, 2012 at 2:16 AM UTC
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