#Americans #Suicide #Women
Since you ask, most days I cannot… I walk in my clothing, unmarked by… Then the almost unnameable lust re… Even then I have nothing against… I know well the grass blades you m…
I knew you forever and you were al… soft white lady of my heart. Surel… me for sitting up late, reading yo… as if these foreign postmarks were… You posted them first in London,…
The end of the affair is always de… She’s my workshop. Slippery eye, out of the tribe of myself my brea… finds you gone. I horrify those who stand by. I am fed.
You are the roast beef I have pur… and I stuff you with my very own o… You are a boat I have rented by t… and I steer you with my rage until… You are a glass that I have paid…
Your midriff sags toward your knee… your breast lie down in air, their nipples as uninvolved as warm starfish. You stand in your elastic case,
From the hodge porridge of their country lust, their local life in Illinois, where all their acres look like a sprouting broom factory,
If I really am walking with ordin… past the same rest home on the sam… and see another waiting head at th… just as she would always sit, watching for anyone from her woode…
A born salesman, my father made all his dough by selling wool to Fieldcrest, Wo… A born talker, he could sell one hundred wet—down…
My faith is a great weight hung on a small wire, as doth the spider hang her baby on a thin web,
Jean, death comes close to us all, flapping its awful wings at us and the gluey wings crawl up our n… Our children tremble in their teen… whirling off on a thumb or a motor…
You always read about it: the plumber with the twelve childr… who wins the Irish Sweepstakes. From toilets to riches. That story.
A red-hot needle hangs out of him, he steers by it as if it were a rudder, he would get in the house any way he… and then he would bounce from wind…
Because there was no other place to flee to, I came back to the scene of the di… came back last night at midnight, arriving in the thick June night
I have a pack of letters, I have a pack of memories. I could cut out the eyes of both. I could wear them like a patchwork… I could stick them in the washer,…
I am thirty this November. You are still small, in your fourt… We stand watching the yellow leave… flapping in the winter rain, falling flat and washed. And I re…