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Click
here to listen to an audio sample of Cant
The
wind drops and the trees are antlered.
— Robin Robertson, “Hide”
Dusk,
New Jersey. I mistake a haunt
of deer for women, white-kerchiefed
stooped for timber in the leaves.
Dublin,
oak. A moored fleet, more than days
past the wood’s last felling, knuckles up
from the painted saucers of a field.
Closer
watch reveals a brotherhood
of stags in solemn rotary, claiming
brief immunity from the oldest game.
Sheep
Mountain, Yukon Territory. White specks
mill the nearest range. “Local kids in t-shirts,” nods
the café owner, “hired for tourists.
Hey,
what good’s the mountain,” here he winks,
“without sheep?” I once believed myself
deeply intuitive and struggled to obey the tongue
I
am said to speak. (To these ears, all is beautifully
misspoken). So, laugh; your laughter
can’t surprise me: I’m a pun
delivery
interrupted—song whose tune you hum
mid-lyric—mirror in a tarnished spoon—cold
smoked turkey—portrait in the trees.
Borderlands:
Texas Poetry Review
Issue #19, Fall/Winter 2002, Tenth Anniversary Issue
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