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Elegy, in Fall In the morning, I'm missing a fish. During my shower, I remember how I bailed the tank the night before, and, sure enough, I find the fish dead in the sink, once opalescent, but now blue-tinged, cold, and cruelly still. I'm a killer, and why not? It's the time of year, late October, and the land prepares. Will I live again through winter dreams? Later, in waning light, I lay flat, arms spread, praying to float away, planning to die, wishing I could force myself awake and turn back into the creature I was before, when not on earth. It almost works. The ceiling splits, and I think the heavens beckon. If it weren't for my mean, stubborn heart, I'd go. I think of my cousin, who, at thirty, left his brains on the bedframe and departed for another place. I'm almost thirty. Will I see him soon? Did the dull walls of his room drop to light a pathway out? Or, when they found him, was he like the fish, his beauty, the thing that shines through skin, lost forever? How can the night never answer? |
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