Now, the storm has arranged the insane,
set down a different order.
Those at the end are children, like rhymes.
A lunatic poem started as a protest.
My smile is thrown down
like a wounded wing
—clumsy me—
I can't lift it, can't grip it.
A crowd tramples my lips—
it gets worse in the throng's midst.
I look up—drops like mini-megaphones.
I chase them down and to each one,
read my poems.
It's odd. Not a single drop lingers with me.
And I remember the sticky stage
in a packed-out house
where, once upon a time
as a child, I foolishly rose
when my mother was dying
and clumsily climbed up on the table
to make God better hear my prayers…