Nothing
Nothing sings in our
bodies
like breath in a flute.
It dwells in the
drum.
I hear it now
that slow beat
like when a voice
said to the dark,
let there be light,
let there be
ocean
and blue fish
born of nothing
and they were
there.
I turn back to bed.
The man there is
breathing.
I touch him
with hands already owned by another
world
Look, they are desert,
they are rust. They have washed
the dead.
They have washed the just born.
They are
open.
They offer nothing.
Take it.
Take nothing from
me.
There is still a little life
left inside this
body,
a little wildness here
and mercy
and it is the
emptiness
we love, touch, enter in one another
and try to
fill.
~ Linda Hogan ~
(Modern American Poetry,
ed. by J. Coulson, P. Temes, and J. Baldwin)
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