What I returned

to you today: hacksaw, razor blades,

black tacks, a softbacked copy of Farewell


to Arms.  When asked about forever

Kant wrote that men can talk of eternity 


but what they know can only be found in time

and space.  When photos of a Mars dawn


were sent back to a round of applause 

on an evening news clip, I knew


suddenly that our turning world is only one 

timepiece.  After an argument I'd swing round


the ornate banister, heels pounding

down the stairs, keys ajangle in my shaking 


hands.  But you don't live by my clock: 

the new moon sharpens 


to a sliver, and I bleed only until 

it burns a solid white half 


through the sky.  For you, a new glossy 

cover model appears in your mailbox, 


or an electric bill marks another month's 

energy used.  This morning you will find:


razors and tacks neatly boxed, your spare

key clipped to the inner lip 


of your mailbox.  I believe this is all

you can understand.  When I pleaded


for any reaction, you would stand 

anchored inside the ring of halogen light


on your rug, saying, Is this ever

going to stop?



Appeared in Passages North in 2005.