Articles/Essays – Volume 58, No. 1
Ezekiel in Walmart
Bread aisle for tortillas
an infant’s hand around my finger
sold-out souls
sharing beans and lentils
in Babylon, but
I’ve been warned, I think.
Sand spitting in the wind
sun-faded advertisements for
lip balm modeled by
nameless lips
we’ll never know.
Watchman with a clay canvas
stolen laptops ripped from their
eye sockets for saying
“Stop staring at me,
you fools, you killers.”
White pipes passing for ceiling décor
our temple waiting to become fake fingernails
the curdled yogurt lurking back there
Mother Earth staring at a shopping cart
where I find my Father’s corpse.
Who will scatter Him again?
I forget this isn’t the end
the baby formula cabinet
swinging open,
empty graves in the future.
A dream of dusty femurs
shiny dog food split across the back
a man drives his electric wheelchair
into the potato chips—
we laugh and never help.
That’s not what this is,
a wintry expulsion, a caress, a kiss
no one cares to give as we
watch our feet fall in line
to the checkout aisle.
We travel hoping to return home
with new gods in plastic bags
we wish weren’t empty on the asphalt
as we cry for flames to light the tundra.