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Late Words for the Moon
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There you are, old moon, old rock-in-the-sky, still holding when I rise on shaky legs for water to wash the bitter powder of the sleeping pill from my tongue. How have I come so untethered from your pull I must be chained to the time-release anchor of these capsules? Tonight, all I have failed to do seems important. You, first marker of man's aspiration to heaven, should understand that. Tonight, the slow disease that percolates in my liver strips too much of the world to the bones sleeping beneath each silken veil. Centuries of poets have sung to you, dressed you in the faces of their beloveds. My house is dark, and you and I are face to face, my blood becoming syrup, the pitted lozenge of your face a chart of where I have not been. Let me look at you without forgetting how the pill dissolves in water. Let me find the right notes to make hymns to speculation and desire. I know men have mapped your surface, given names to your valleys and dusty ridges. I know the right machines would let me stand on your surface like a street corner, the way I'm standing here, one hand tight on this glass, the other clutching the counter's edge. Let me be grateful for the slow work of these pills. Let me come to you another night with something like longing. I know better than to believe you are listening. But I have to say this, and there you are.
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Writer
Bio
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Al Maginnes has appeared in numerous publications, including The Georgia Review, Quarterly West, Bellingham Review, Crab Orchard Review, Mid-American Review, New England Review, New Orleans Review, Shenandoah, Green Mountains Review, Poem, Southern Poetry Review, Texas Review, and Two Rivers Review. He has published two volumes of poetry, Taking Up Our Daily Tools (St. Andrews College Press, 1997) and The Light in Our Houses (Pleaides Press, 2000). He teaches at Wake Technical Community College in Raleigh, NC.
almaginnes@mindspring.com
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Other
Pedestal Published Works
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