V V V V V w v 9 0 -W 8 The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 4, 2009 All old maids are mystics, Knees on hardwood floors; Dust circling as their bodies descend; Gumbals on the bottoms of their throats; Chapped lips opening in hope and recitation Yit-ga-dal v'yit-ka-dash sh'mei ra-ba And waiting, parted, for the choral response, Silence like shallow waves That crush against their mouths, Salt water dripping on their tongues. Bodies become brittle and cold, Thin glass in a tall copper lamp. They are objects now, And always were, thinking back to the blacktop, The rotted peach kickball, The broken bottle hopscotch, The forced letters from the front, And then the casual expectations from the infirm. So it makes sense now, that all their objects Have become people now, and all people Are spiritually significant, always present, Never gone. Each book is a Bible, Each book is a blond, bug-eyed boy, Each book is silently loved Just as all things are silently loved. Things happen in twos. Resemblances are unmistakable. Promises made should not be broken. Resurrection of the dead. Truth reveals itself only in dreams And golden songs hummed sweetly At the breakfast table while clinging To a faded green mug. In the corner, where the peeling walls meet: What is solitaire but at attempt at tarot and truth? The future is a way to waste the present, The past was a waste to all present, All rise and say Amen.t by David Kinzer I LSA sophomore ALL OL D MAIDS ARE 4 A B- LLUSTRATION BY ROSE JAFPE Poet's Notebook s Agh l 1 i f ILLUSTRATION BY ROSE JAFFE The Dying Season the leaves deadened because it's the dying season and I'm walking on your grandmother just as you've stood on mine scanning verdant fields lost among flat plaques are we really so afraid to hide our corpses in the grass leaves and dirt and drippings from trees my hand gets cold sweeping past names clean my feet grow cold walkingover them - Adriana Rewald, LSA senior The Warmest September Sheits atmtb coswalkhuddesnersherw s andows In a beat-up Honda, low to the ground, waiting for the light To go from yellow to red to green. Yesterday I peeked over her slouching shoulder: The crisp handwriting: "Honey, are you happy There?" Today she clasped herthick sealed response Standing by the side of the post office leaning From one knee to the other. She licked one Stamp, debated two: the second poised on the edge Of her index finger, anxious for moisture. The leaves grew from green to yellow to red And I whispered to t hem "It's not something you can Measure' Their response: a soft crinkling, a harvestnof agreement. - LauraBeth Winnick, SSA sophomore