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S E P T E M B E R 2 0 0 0 FIXby Alice Fulton | |||||||||||||
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(For help, see a note about the audio.) Go to: An Audible Anthology Poetry Pages |
There is no caring less for you. I fix on music in the weeds, count cricket beats to tell the temp, count my breaths from here to Zen. September does its best. The Alaskan pipeline lacks integrity, mineral fibers are making people dizzy, we're waiting for a major quake. Ultra- violet intensity is gaining, the ozone's full of holes and I can find no shade. There is no caring less. Without the moon the earth would whirl us three times faster, gale-force winds would push us down. Say earth lost mass, a neighbor star exploded -- it's if and and and but. The cosmos owns our luck. Say under right and rare conditions, space and time could oscillate. I know what conditions those would be for me. I'd like to keep my distance, my others, keep my rights reserved. Yet look at you, intreasured, where resolutions end. No matter how we breathe or count our breaths, there is no caring less for you for me. I have to stop myself from writing "sovereign," praising with the glory words I know. Glaciologists say changes in the mantle, the planet's vast cold sheets could melt. Catastrophe is everywhere, my presence here is extra -- yet -- there is no caring less. Alice Fulton is the author of a collection of essays, Feeling as a Foreign Language: The Good Strangeness of Poetry (1999). Her poem in this issue will appear in her new book, Felt, to be published next year. All material copyright © 2000 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved. |
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