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Evan Williams

Citric Satisfaction

Breakfast is a single tangerine

grown in the winter, he imagines it’s good and enough.

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His wife puts some coffee on.

She’d be an aged thing now, were she real.

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Shrewish shih tzu shakes off icy-handed pats now.

Shake, doggy, shake, doggy, shake off my love.

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The dog, haughty, trundles off to sleep,

dreams of masters who use words like firmament.

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He reminds himself that firmament is just

a fancy word for sky. He would use it, too,

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the fancy word, were it not for the sink

being broken and cold-

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cracked walls descending glacially upon him. A town

where you just sleep

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at night, that’s him.

If he were to disappear,

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he’d write a note: to all the royalty

I never did meet, my father and his father

 

gave me this name and this tangerine,

this leaky sink and sinking home,

 

gracefully aging nonexistent wife, a shih tzu

who does not accept my love.

 

I want you to know, beneath

this firmament, it is good and enough.

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Evan Williams is a first year student at The University of Chicago; he cannot properly wind a hose, and frequently burns himself lighting candles.

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