
Summer lifted its warm breath into the dead
Fox’s mouth. The silence, wild as ants
Performing their sturdy, steadfast but brief
Interviews of its various offices
& orifices. They concluded nothing
Other than its flesh. Sheaf by sheaf, the ants
Took the fox into their hole in the earth
To live with them in the dark not as the dead
Normally live in the earth, quiet as a thief
In the thrall of touching paradise, but live
As a God who could be broken into bread,
Leaf by leaf, grain by golden grain,
Served from one mouth to another, black
As power and the milk one animal knits
Out of another and gives. Give. I would
Have left the dead in the previous winter
Where they had lived beneath the pigeon’s wing
& lifted it up into the anaphora of the gray
Sun rising, but the dead keep walking
Across the bridge of dust trembling between us,
The dust in me calling to the dust they be-
Come, so now when I hike the dry hillocks
Opening the green, green-yellow, yellow-brown
Doors of the grass creaking beneath my feet,
I enter as, when, where called, some cause of light
To touch, and the dead — fox or feral father,
God — throw out their skull, their yip and hard
Yammer stammering in the grass, and I
Turn toward their breath on things, some light
To touch without guard or gate, some light without.




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