12.06.2022

you could tell it would be a long time before they would be bent down to the kind of love from which they could not right themselves

Before I started to love you, 
I tried to love the world: 
 
the plump, dumb oranges that crushed 
in my mouth, the waves that rolled upshore 
 
until they were eyelid thin and purple. 
And the girls who lined up to buy pops 
 
in their small bright suits, the ones who slouched 
and let their sandy thighs and ankles 
 
go unbrushed: tried to love them 
without seeming to, to watch 
 
with an indifference I could wear. 
Afternoons, they leaned against each other 
 
picking out shapes in the clouds. 
They weren't girls to throw their hair 
 
before them, to dry it in the sun. 
Still, their hair dried in the sun. 
 
You could tell it would be a long time 
before they would be bent 
 
down to the kind of love 
from which they could not right themselves. 
 
It was a long time before I saw 
the slivered moon is no scythe; it is not blade 
 
or pool: we cannot see ourselves there. 
It is only from here that it changes, 
 
looks small as a thumbnail, 
something to offer you 
 
like the blonding shoreline, like myself. 
As if that is what the world is for. 
 
[Mary Szybist {1970- } 'What the World is For', from Granted]

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