BPR 48 | 2021
What if it wasn’t hell, it was only sadness,
 And your mother never came looking for you, never
 Put the earth on hold, calling your number,
 And your husband only wanted to cheer you up
 With a handful of ruby arils, a lead-crystal 
 Flute of bubbles that struggled to reach the surface;
 What if the pit bull with squared heads was just
 That old black mutt who only yapped at ghosts,
 What if the ghosts were just insomnia,
 A way to never rest in peace, what if
 The winter came and went and came and went,
 And the spring was out of whack, and that had nothing
 To do with you, and the flowers weren’t lamps
 Or bridal torches to solemn you into the darkness;
 What if the darkness was only the curtains pinched
 Against the sun in the bedroom during the day,
 And what if the corner’s horror was only the shadow
 Of a coat hanging by its neck from a doorknob,
 And the woolly fog that scumbled out of the river
 Was a way of seeing carried inside your eyes,
 What if the meadow of sweets was the worn world
 Whose beauties would outlast you, until they didn’t,
 What if your alarm was just the alarm,
 What if, all along, you were free to go?



