I Have Read The Whole Moon

by Emily Skaja

In March I drop an egg hoping a bird will fy out disbelieving
science. All the manuals tell me this is a logical contract.
You commit yourself to a shell & you end up fying. Fine.
Stone after stone, I'm defacing the river of being in love with you.
True, I don't care how that sounds. I have a list
of cocoons to transform my body: Uncontrollable
Shaking. Sleep Paralysis. Dread of Eating. I'm guilty
of pretending the roads to your house are no longer roads
but deerpaths angled crooked through the marsh. Again the water
doesn't stop; it rains even when the weather is overdue: a holy
parallel. My mouth is rotted & anonymous. The bed needs oars.
I'm interested in dust but only new dust arriving unmarked
after you leave. After you leave, you leave &
thicketed in sludge I've been glued open. Self as spectacle:
Yolk Marvel. Unbird. Emily as grave pillar as salt-lick as dammed up
luminous in thread. I have read the whole moon
cycle; it doesn't explain the cracks. Mercury for once
cannot be blamed. My dishes float in soap like little planets.
I drop my hands in the sink. They come up feathered.





Last updated March 11, 2023