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I
We
saw
the
screaming
trees,
fired
and
stark,
raining
down.
Another
saw
the
waxing
moon
beneath
the
cover
of
screams.
We
fought
and
cried,
terrified
we’d
seen
the
last
full
moon,
and
hadn’t
registered
it.
We
denied
the
screaming
trees.
II
All the
quiet
we have known,
fading
into
the streets
and running
thin,
becomes
a silence unforeseen,
in the dark the trees
will scream.
This
gestation
belongs
at
her
feet
and
my lips
are
radiation.
Another
way
of saying
my
disease
in tongues
is
finite
and melancholy,
my festering
dust
relief.
III
I
will
turn
this
devastation
into
my fits
and screams
as long
as these
nights
are
immaterial
and
until
all
these
moments
disappear.
Want to go again?
Amish Trivedi lives in Providence, Rhode Island. His poems can be found on RealPoetik and Word For/Word. His chapbooks include Selections from Episode III, The Breakers, and Museum of Vandals, out from Cannibal. He rarely updates the Trivedi Chronicles.
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