ERICA DAWSON
      OCD 
      The learned men call it all a true 
  Emergency, the summer's long, 
  Tireless drought. And I walk through 
  The public park breaking the thong 
  Of my flip flop, limping in strong 
  Heat while the proletariat 
  Of honey-suckle limps along. 
  Quod me nutrit me destruit. 
      When Death strolls past, what will they do, 
  The pussy-willows in the throng 
  Of goldenrod turned brown, but cue 
  The organ, its sepulchral song 
  In desiccating sun, belong 
  To soil which can again be fit? 
  The bell will toll—one loud ding-dong. 
  Quod me nutrit me destruit.  
      Deep in the trees, two schoolboys chew 
  Clover and toss their homemade bong 
  Inside a bag when I step through 
  The bush. The smell of smoke hangs strong. 
  They stay with me, wading the long 
  Path of the littered rivulet. 
  Without a clue, they nod along. 
  Quod me nutrit me destruit.  
      I always know where I belong. 
  Lock all the gates. I'm desperate 
  To hear birds sing my constant song  
  Quod me nutrit me destruit.    
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