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Fields of Burnt Sugar

I'm nine, standing on a beryl hill

under a humid dusk slab -

 

my sister picking wheat anthers

from stalks as tall as she is,

 

the scent of scorched sugar

knifing through the low.

 

My father leads us down

into the sharp wood line,

 

until we reach a clearing

where chatter-bearded men

 

operate a *** still in a glade,

making silken moonshine.

 

That memory sticks in the brain

like snow in a winter cobweb.

 

Later, on the drive home,

my father stopped to buy

 

white label Jim Beam -

we watched strange shades

 

rise from the deer graves

behind the liquor store lot.

 

Fast forward, I'm forty-five

& Dad's been dead eight years:

 

I've tried and failed to armor

myself against the wild pain

 

of the world. Everything

evaporates down to grief.

 

Example: here's a picture

of myself in Paris, in a blaze

 

of mezcal near Les Halles,

the sky full of titanic doves -

 

I feel only the brutal absence

of my second wife, unready

 

to share her bitter puzzles

or her raw pill spells.

 

She climbed into her pestle

& flew away over the river

 

into fields of burnt sugar

sown with copper *** seeds -

 

Baba Yaga drinking wine

distilled from absent fathers.

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Written by
EvanS
46 / M / DC
Published
Jan 26
Lines·Words
40·206
Permission

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