In texts so normal we find Unraveled yarns they left behind To swallow a dry pill that bruises a dream It tends to be the easiest of things
I’ve left my yarn in tranquil holes Dug so deep and filled with snow Underneath lie the bodies of old I tell myself Who could have known?
Mended with gauze and fixed with scraps The vessel caves in and the flies come back The whither and tremble of a soft human hand Which quivers so lightly through weakened grasps
I ask this old woman now barely stable Did your yarn precede the marvel Of a young child, bold and able? Did it graze him and make him wiser? Powdered bone you hid under covers
How the leaves and meadows of your memories Reach for both ankles, pushing you gently Towards a beckoning boney finger that urges you closer Will such saccharine visions bury six feet under? So it goes
The yarns unravel now, as they always have From birth to the backwards prance of descent She holds me, whispering me her loves, her life And my tears unfurl with hers as I ache, hearing such words Who could have known?