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On the first day, we are all just hydrogen and time. Filling these hands— this one mirror angle, one small wrist. One afternoon’s picked-over bones. The second day, I spun ten times. On the grass, sky turning its cosmic ballet. The axis of the world, there in the front yard. On the third day, a hangman’s rope of pantyhose. Easy choices like stop, and get a ****** or don’t stop, and get a family. On the fourth day, tick-a-tick-a-ticking. Since I learned to tell time, cradling has been inescapable and immanent. The fifth day, I wanted an ovipositor that would glide and bed, know it’s way around a dark brood pouch. Day six, caught stealing ancient definitions, stuffing my pockets and shoes. I’m told zülf is the wisp of hair falling over my eyebrow. On the seventh day, I shelved myself and gave back one rib, honey spines of snakes. What tiny handprints they’d leave if they had hands.
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Nov 8, 2012
Nov 8, 2012 at 3:46 PM UTC
7-Day Ghazal
On the first day, we are all just hydrogen and time. Filling these hands— this one mirror angle, one small wrist. One afternoon’s picked-over bones. The second day, I spun ten times. On the grass, sky turning its cosmic ballet. The axis of the world, there in the front yard. On the third day, a hangman’s rope of pantyhose. Easy choices like stop, and get a ****** or don’t stop, and get a family. On the fourth day, tick-a-tick-a-ticking. Since I learned to tell time, cradling has been inescapable and immanent. The fifth day, I wanted an ovipositor that would glide and bed, know it’s way around a dark brood pouch. Day six, caught stealing ancient definitions, stuffing my pockets and shoes. I’m told zülf is the wisp of hair falling over my eyebrow. On the seventh day, I shelved myself and gave back one rib, honey spines of snakes. What tiny handprints they’d leave if they had hands.
Written by
American
Nov 8, 2012
Nov 8, 2012 at 3:46 PM UTC
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