I found a white hair on your head
now I can feel the rain coming
I feel it in my left knee
behind the charcoal briquettes, monsieur
the ageless current of a storm
beginning
we are not alive in the imaginary
structures of living
no longer one-man missioning
around the cerulean earth
in a dark pod you imagine yourself
dressed entirely in tinfoil
the apartment shudders down romantically
cats know how to handle heat
which sends us into a small
panic and the hours mean hardly
anything when our love is stored
in a cool dry place
--
I have turned again
to the dung beetle
mooring across the field
turned again to the great Russian novel
at dawn I was convinced
I had given up a promising life as a tap dancer
we do not hold each other
and think of the assassin constructing
in the human ego
we listen briefly to the man shouting
on the street outside the window
and think we are safe
Bianca Stone is the author of several chapbooks, including I Want To Open The Mouth God Gave You Beautiful Mutant (Factory Hollow Press); and illustrator of Antigonick, a collaboration with Anne Carson (New Directions). Her poems have appeared in Best American Poetry 2011, Conduit, and Tin House. She lives in Brooklyn.
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