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    Young Man: In Reference to that Final Act of Villainy—Death

    Transmitted on Monday, April, 13th, 2009 in Heroes & Myth , Poetry

    Young Man: In Reference to that Final Act of Villainy—Death

    The affair of night running began as an escape
    from the angry arms of a disgruntled July
    in which the fields dried to brown chalk
    and death hung in the trees, waiting.

    But the night was another type of life.
    Then, the wind spoke to the ache in the shoulders,
    eased away the salt clinging to skin,
    effervesced from the slick of sweat.

    The running was all too easy at first, so much like
    imitating emotion or pronouncing a name.
    I could live in the warm, soft hollow of night,
    subsist by gnawing the wet of its edges

    and running further and further away
    from the dusty, gray box called home
    where memory crawled across its floors
    like a child with broken legs. My feet

    pounded the night and there was time to think,
    moments to dream, opportunities to choose
    the dynamics of a world. The next poem,
    I would say, will be about Captain America

    and social/cultural identity. Then the miles
    came and went and the night was still there
    and I wore my sweat like an unbreakable
    shield, even when my ankle rolled

    and the pain became a cancer spreading
    from tendon to bone to lung, heart and brain
    and there was no choice but to stop, clutch
    at the wounding, and listen to the sound

    of my labored lungs—my father lived there,
    in the soft, burning pockets of my lungs,
    wheezing, trembling, passing his last breath
    into me, a small, awkward heirloom for carrying.

    Hobbling home, I saw the corpse of a young dog
    rolling in the perfume of death. It lay roadside,
    tongue swollen and lolling from its mouth.
    Its eyes asked: Don’t you know me?


    *This poem appears in Prick of the Spindle

    Taken from “…hide behind me…”

    click to hear me read this poem

    Tags: Death, hide behind me, Young Man


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