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       SANDY LONGHORN   
      Dispatch From the Outpost   
      Distant one—today the weather  
        will not cooperate, will not stay put 
        in   proper April, but lurches backwards 
        cold and gray. The birds do not take   notice. 
        A meadowlark emerges from the brush, 
        sparrows cluster under the   sweet gum, 
        and finches feed on the wild thistle. 
        Here, I am in the company   of wings. 
      Along this marsh, I have space 
        to walk and unravel what I want to   say. 
        This is the thinning-down time, month 
        of thunder and hail and   half-finished meals. 
        Days ago, the wind knocked down the power 
        lines,   arcing sparks that fireworked the sky. 
        The house went mute, and I was   alone 
        in the silence that lives under the silence 
        of a one-bedroom home.  
        Here, the world is all wait and want,  
        patience, the charm you tied   around my wrist. 
      And this—consider on your return 
        that every season finds us changed.    
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