Poetry Founded in 1912 by Harriet Monroe
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Featured Poem
Rule
Sex and Taxes
by Kevin Cantwell

Plum black & the blush white of an apple

shoulder, melon & cream, in tones to list
the flesh; in light, washed colors off at last

& textures sheer with damp I slowly pull
from you with your quick help. Weekend's ample

procrastinations to forget the least
of what we want to do. April, half a blast

of cold, half new light, green & simple.
Now dusk. Now fear. We pencil what we owe

on this short form, our numbers good enough.
The goose-neck glare undoes how we spent the day.

Each bite each bee-sting kiss each bitten O
all aftertaste. Later, at the drop-off,
postmark queue, we joke: "Now we can die!"

 
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