My throat is heavy with August’s sorrows I sit by the shore and wait for the weakest waves to drown my little feet — I stagger over them like a clumsy giant. But it’s seaborne sadness wraps, a constant, unrelenting embrace like a mother’s grief, a gentle creature’s death, a rabid dog feasting on a poor, meatless bone. I am alive — so cruelly alive for it all as it falls
down my throat, down my chest like a child’s pained whisper. My body is heavy with August’s weight as I retire to my filthy bed and hold myself.
Cold are the nights in their quiet, lackadaisical, taunting hours.
Come now, September. Come, kindly, if you please; sweep me away into a million, invisible dust particles suspended