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The Sands, the sea itself cannot contain me
While I stood in the stillness, slept
deep in the bones of men,
I must have looked like a fool.
Against the crag, beyond our fears,
the smallness of my nape tightens: its air,
exhausted over the course of winter.
I look across the sands of salt and fervor,
weep for what I may have lost - gentle
��������as the hands I imagined
��������along my spine.
It is here, beside the low wooden fence
that whispers the road home, here where
I will surrender, weightless
as the dying moth.
��������And if I stand in ill repute, my
heart beating against the black clouds of
this storm -
may you come find me.
�2006 by Cherilyn Ferroggiaro
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