by Bill Yarrow
The body receives its embrace but
only by the anti-body. Effete angels, stoic
guardians of suffering, circled by the birds
of perpetration, look on in translucent hopelessness.
Spurred on by anesthetists, I fall on the mercy of the corpse.
The world enforces the larceny of living. A widow vacations
in the Alps, falls in love with her concierge. Across
a desert, a Bengali widower walks a crooked
mile. Bring spices, an incensed container,
and, for the sacrifice, a decorated carving knife.
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A version of this poem (originally called "For the Unshriven") appeared in Connotation Press.
Thank you, Joani Reese.
epigraph:
“The good years shall devour them"
—King Lear 5.3.24
This poem appears in Blasphemer (Lit Fest Press 2015).
Great sweep in a small space, Bill. Effective imagery.
"The world enforces the larceny of living." Wonderful.
Strong piece. *
The world in 86 words. Amazing.
*