I
See yourself wrapped in soft paper tissue.
You are prepared to become ash,
to float into the sky in pieces.
Part of you may land in the open trap of a mouth,
rest on tongue, taut,
the only exposed muscle—free and writhing,
or lay in soil, in the shade of a tulip
to be fed upon by the green things
that grow toward the sun, that know no love.
∞
Every time I see a fire,
I know something has died.
II
Open a book and rip each page.
Take The Wild Iris from your white bookshelf.
Smoke “Witchgrass.” Burn the poem
into your soft throat as you inhale,
brand the silk cord of your trachea.
Unfold “Lady Lazarus” and eat it line by line.
Every inner wall must be painted black
with famous words, with words.
Eat until acid fills your mouth, until you cough ink.
∞
Every time I read a poem,
I know something has died.
by Ruth Spalding
Ruth Spalding will be living in Ann Arbor come Summer, editing textbooks, then going to the School of Social Work at the University of Michigan. She hopes to learn to ride a bike.
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