| at your house the smell of our still living human bodies and oven gas
|
| you pray to nothing out loud
|
| two first names and an ampersand
|
| embroidered proudly on a kitchen towel
|
| you’re a beautiful and violent work
|
| with a skinny neck of a chinese bird
|
| in a fading ancient painting
|
| and if you’re in heaven waiting
|
| you made it there fighting
|
| the tightest kite string
|
| in a bad storm with lightning
|
| and now these few presidents
|
| frowning in my pocket
|
| can persuade no god
|
| to let me let you talk, oh these few presidents
|
| frowning in my pocket
|
| can persuade no god
|
| to let me let you off
|
| even though i haven’t seen you in years
|
| yours is a funeral i’d fly to from anywhere
|
| i thought i had a pebble in my sock
|
| i pulled it off and shook out a wasp
|
| it stumbled out lost, and without a pause
|
| i’m stung as i was, still i stomped it i thought, there is no paved street worthy
|
| of your perfect scandanavian feet
|
| my crooked chinese fingers groped
|
| the machinery of your throat
|
| and now these few presidents
|
| frowning in my pocket
|
| can persuade no god
|
| to let me let you talk, oh these few presidents
|
| drowning in my pocket
|
| can persuade no god
|
| to let me let you off
|
| even though i haven’t seen you in years
|
| yours is a funeral i’d fly to from anywhere |