I live in dead houses. Have never felt the breath and blood and bones of a structure, And I think that to feel something like that, You need siblings and babies, A family. The heart of a house… I’ve heard it variously called The kitchen, the living room, The dining room, the bedroom, the hearth… Whatever heart I’ve touched was always cold and stone, Too long without contraction to be identified as a heart. And I feel like a person who’s never owned a pet, Never had a proper friend; For I don’t understand the care and feeding of a house, Or the give and take of a relationship with it. And I think that just by moving in I shock it, Shock it with my covered-over pit of neglect, so strong It dies on impact, And I make my home there in the carcass. A parasite in the body it killed, A scavenger taking shelter in the bones. I live in snail shells in the garden. I live in burnt, hollow trees. I live in dead houses.