| It wasn’t long before I rose into the silk of my night-robes and swilled the stars and the beetles back into sweetness—even my fingernails carry my likeness, and I smudge the marrow of myself into light. I whisper street- car, ardor, midnight into the ears of the soldier so he will forget everything but the eyes of the night nurse whose hair shines beneath the prow of her white cap. In the end, it is me he shipwrecks. O arrow. My arms knot as I pluck the lone string tauter. O crossbow. I kneel. He oozes, and the grasses and red wasp knock him back from my sight. The night braids my hair. I do not dream. I do not glow. Copyright © 2015 by Tarfia Faizullah. Used with permission of the author. |
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