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Two creatures' eyes have seen the sun, and now their lids are filled with dust. But if their eyes were blue, or brown, I cannot tell, and yet I must. St Claire's an Amiable Child who sleeps secure and snug as Grant, but who can tell me of his eyes? (The city parks curator can't.) And Johnson had a cat named Hodge who fed on oysters, and was fine; his coat was black, but not his eyes, whose shade I cannot now divine. Two creatures hold me in their gaze, and thoughts of it I can't dislodge: the nature of your eyes, my friends, your sleeping eyes, St Claire and Hodge?
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Jun 19, 2010
Jun 19, 2010 at 3:14 PM UTC
Two creatures
Two creatures' eyes have seen the sun, and now their lids are filled with dust. But if their eyes were blue, or brown, I cannot tell, and yet I must. St Claire's an Amiable Child who sleeps secure and snug as Grant, but who can tell me of his eyes? (The city parks curator can't.) And Johnson had a cat named Hodge who fed on oysters, and was fine; his coat was black, but not his eyes, whose shade I cannot now divine. Two creatures hold me in their gaze, and thoughts of it I can't dislodge: the nature of your eyes, my friends, your sleeping eyes, St Claire and Hodge?
After Edward Arlington Robinson.  I make no claim for this to be good work; it just turned up in my head this afternoon.
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Jun 19, 2010
Jun 19, 2010 at 3:14 PM UTC
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