Articles/Essays – Volume 11, No. 2
A Study of Oranges
It might never happen, I say.
The wind might rise
on the lake and then every
image would be broken,
scattered into itself.
Two boys stand on the bridge,
tossing oranges into the water,
watching the long cones
of the splashes.
It is winter.
Into this snowy landscape
the oranges seem to carry
their own light—the definitive
shapes of incursion, sharp
solitude made real.
Sometimes I pretend I am the wind
and begin shouting.
The last orange drops
perfectly. Its reflection
sails up toward the swift eclipse
of the splash.