The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Simon Perchik
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All evening by itself and weightless cradlesong —I fill the warm sink the way I would a bag —there's a certain care to dip the eyes into paper
—don't ask my why—I bathe your envelope till a cheek falls away—I save only the canceled seals, your letters burning in a shallow bowl near the water
near the smoke drifting across this sink making up new water I don't recognize or why this useless postage stamp is rescued—it was the sky calling out was the eyes.
I lift this stamp to lay it down one by one, softer than when between the cemetery rows and all those orderly lines across the powerless stone and my eyes
—you send and what's left is all evening another death :each letter with all its heart the lullaby about its heart, about its missing arms —this plume in search for the disappeared the missing stamp and glue
—you send and all night —don't ask my why—I just let the water —I have this fear, this passed upon this sent out for, this martyrdom struck, holding fast—the dead
hold fast to everything. Only water. They want only water. And gathering.
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