Cimarron
Review |
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Long
Division I start
awake to a stranger’s hand are with
you across the bed. Arm numb, of infomercial
blue dividing the dark, in its shadows
and solids. Glassesless, And believe you me it’s the last knife you’ll ever need! The television
chef or host wields his wares, to be tin
cans, blocks of frozen spinach, my arm and
wonder at the line of light the so-thin
space where a thing, once whole, I want him
to cut more, to divide halves of
bleeding tomatoes, tomatoes are as many
as the pieces newly rent. It’s
long division, this night split of rest, concentrating
on splitting in whole numbers), as the vivisected
halves. Long division between
the you and yous so several now between
me and what may well be ceiling. between
myself and everything else. coagulates
and spreads. The light is just order or
division and I want to To test
its magic heft, as if the di- of anything
cast before it. And believe The repetition
comforts, the call-and-response designed
to come between could be, to ever
come between. And he keeps prices and
sells. The things dismembered take center
stage. The tomato bits, the metal, mix in a
bin below, as remnants of an autopsy for the
first time, the flotsam embraces to come
to; the pinprick reminder of nerve that knew armpit and
fingertip, tendon and vein, itself as
if in orgasm, as a hawk might love through
flexed fingertips at the hushed, of your
hip limns the landscape of the room in an improvised,
ecstatic prayer. of your
form, the things that are distant— and sting
of waking limb— remain distant. the mess
of refuse in the chef’s unwanted bin, ©Jeremy Gregersen
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