 |
Menu
..:: CONTENTS
::..
Volume XI, Issue I
..:: POETRY ::..
..:: PROSE ::..
..:: ETC
::..
Contributor's Notes
..:: ARCHIVES ::..
Volume I, Issue I
Volume I, Issue II
Volume II, Issue I
Volume II, Issue II
Volume III, Issue I
Volume III, Issue II
Volume IV, Issue I
Volume IV, Issue II
Volume V, Issue I
Volume V, Issue II
Volume VI, Issue I
Volume VI, Issue II
Volume VII, Issue I
Volume VII, Issue II
Volume VIII, Issue I
Volume VIII, Issue II
Volume IX, Issue I
Volume IX, Issue II
Volume X, Issue I
Volume X, Issue II
|
|
|
 |
from A Concoction of Glass Bees
Lynn Strongin
But day has spiked
How can
I be calm as water
I must I can turn each page of stone.
Penelope's calm comes to me when a whisper of wind lifts the lightest blanket mother could find in Iceland.
//
Advance //
|
|
|