|  | ABRAHAM BURICKSON Returning It doesn’t take much, really, for things to fall back  into place,just the natural course of gravity, or something obvious,  like time.
 Nothing  will ever be the same again, said Bill,
 but same is in  our nature, something about being so heavy, landbound,
 it’s our industry on this earth: mighty mammals, builders  of cars, makers of calendars.
 A few restaurants serve gumbo now, waiters smile and fill  cups with water,
 workers work and go home to watch television and dream
 over soils returning to the same tempo,
 and before the same tone of an unnotable morning. Sun rises and lifts around clouds.
 People are more evident today.  Yesterday was remarkable:
 Henry finished painting: a radiant spread of blues and  reds
 rippling out from his porch over the skin of five houses,  as if
 abandonment could color wood, some comprehension of  experience
 by the inanimate, which today fades as fact. Henry won’t see it at all, his mind
 reoccupied with that solid, warming feel of forward  motion,
 leaving yesterday abandoned on the lawn as artifact.
 Later, an older man, drunk
 and wandering the wrong way home,
 will come upon the red-blue wave and note
 how close we still live to destruction.
   
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