For

“I’m leaving you,” she said, “for you make me sick.” But

of course she didn’t say that. She thought the “for”; she admired

its elegant distance, the way it’s wedged like an iron strut

between result and cause, the way it’s almost “far,” and dire

as a raised eyebrow. She liked the way it sounds like speaking

through a cardboard paper towel tube, using it for a megaphone;

not loud, but strong, all those compacted years shoving

out the other end, as if she were certain she wanted to be alone.

Or

The first four bars of Beethoven’s Sixth, the Pastorale,

repeat and repeat, always with variation: or, and or,

something to violate expectations, not fully antiphonal,

only an oar dipped into the measure to make an interior

swirl, pulling the craft slightly to the side, yet ahead,

still: little cupped trails alongside the mark where

the mind turned, questions were asked, and shed,

before moving on, nothing that can’t be repaired.

Nor

As a flower sheds petal after petal, as further tests

strip away one after another of the last hopes for a cure,

as a person shakes into the waste bin all her cigarettes

and goes down the street not knowing who she is, the pure

air of saints is achieved by abandonment: Jesus in the garden

alone, cold moon disappearing, Buddha at the morning star,

mind emptied of its snarl of ignorance. Neither to harden

against loss, nor to welcome it. To let it be who you are.