Poetry / February 2011 (Issue 13)
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by Krishnakumar Sankaran
You came for butterflies, a glade like a pause between hill and river. A wind in flux flocked with blind colors that met and ducked into holes in a sky held up by branches. The branches were old fingers raking sky. We walked into a pause of leaves, curling wings that cracked like bones. The wind ran through you on invisible wings. We didn’t stay long. It wasn’t long when you couldn’t stop coughing up a keening knot, a weight in your chest. You tasted ash. Your tongue, a dry white paste. We heard later of green X rays with motes rotting microcosmic in your lungs like indifferent skeletons in a glade. |
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Cha: An Asian Literary Journal 2007-2018
ISSN 1999-5032
All poems, stories and other contributions copyright to their respective authors unless otherwise noted.