Think the saddest thing about this land Is how hard it tries to live To hold, to let go— how it Stills in the middle of a catastrophe How it sings Only when no one’s about to hear How its silence Is never wholly true
How the clouds go by And the suns The crescents grow up and pass And people— Yet it, shuddering, remains And how it struggles To weave peace out its Wavering fields
And ever-dancing cities— The dance of a Persian woman In shackles How it slaughters its own flowers In search of their seeds How it breaks apart In the middle of a night In the middle of a little girl’s question In the middle of a smile
How the maidens Keep on hanging their dresses to dry And children keep hunting For helpless worms And snows melt into grasses Till they too sail away Yet it, shuddering, remains
How it will gnaw away the town It carved itself Feast upon its own beautiful bones How hard it struggles to stir In its own queer death And how it will wither And wither, and wither And not tire—