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Poetry

Genesis

By Imogen Harrison

I perch, legs dangling-

toes clenched (to keep my socks and shoes on)

      -upon the precipice, the ledge of wet sand

at which light turns to dark, in the haze of dusk.

And all things end. Less of a bang than a whine.

No stranger to endings, I think, they’re

fertile ground if you’re thinking of beginning.

      And I watch him work –

really, out of nothing, but that’s hard to imagine,

so I’ll give you a hint;

he’s like a motorbike, headlamp dimming, fading

speeding out of the gloom on the oily asphalt,

glittering with glass and stars; throwing up waves

of almost-creatures in the heaving dust of

ribs and fruit,

      clattering and rolling in his wake. Settling.

And the high-rises climb over the horizon,

      glittering, getting their bearings –

planting pipes like roots into the earth that keeps

the waters from the waters.

And, watching this, it seems it’s always existed.

The kneading of creation and un-creation –

the crumbling of it all into

      universe soup –

can be This:

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