thirst |
Indiscriminate Water
Water washes hands of their muck & mud, or some
of their muck & mud, only certain sorts. It doesn’t
discriminate, it is simply itself to whom
ever plunges themselves in the under of it. They will
be washed. Like the fruit
trees at the end
of the season, it will have built itself in them, swelled
them to then let fall the fruit. It doesn’t choose
the hand or tongue, the mandible, a side-
ways working jaw of the doe with her three
lambs charging up this row, down that
row too close to the road.
It’s coincidence hat fruit
bruised in its fall has in its beginning a soft-rot.
It is skin and flesh and water. Tell me,
when the windfall is washed for the cider,
after all those hands have gathered it,
the lips licked with the almost all water
on their tongue and in their mouth, the 99.5 %
of it behind their pucker at the tart transition,
will they remember washing those hands and wiping
them with a white cloth that morning, and too
those hands, at the start of the season, and only
after a long day pruning to train the trees & seedlings,
to wash it all down with water, before taking
taking the farmer’s daughter behind
the idle tractor telling her after the dress is torn
and the blood is thick and smeared between her knees
wash yourself,
there’s water
over there at the pump,
and while you’re at it, bring some
to me if you please.
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