|
Today, ten thousand people will die |
and their small replacements will bring joy |
and this will make sense to someone |
removed from any sense of loss. |
I, too, will die a little and carry on, |
doing some paperwork, driving myself |
home. The sky is simply overcast, |
nothing is any less than it was |
yesterday or the day before. In short, |
there's no reason or every reason |
why I'm choosing to think of this now. |
The short-lived holiness |
true lovers know, making them unaccountable |
except to spirit and themselves--suddenly |
I want to be that insufferable and selfish, |
that sharpened and tuned. |
I'm going to think of what it means |
to be an animal crossing a highway, |
to be a human without a useful prayer |
setting off on one of those journeys |
we humans take. I don't expect anything |
to change. I just want to be filled up |
a little more with what exists, |
tipped toward the laughter which understands |
I'm nothing and all there is. |
By evening, the promised storm |
will arrive. A few in small boats |
will be taken by surprise. |
There will be survivors, and even they will die. |