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by Lucie Brock-Broido
The North Star hanging
Like an umlaut over all of us, causes
    (even brittle) me to bend.
The weight of everything, bleak as
    babies in baskets
Rushing down the River Sauer toward
    their celestial misery.
I remember everything: my sister and I
    calling our mother person-
To-person in the afterlife. Always the
    dead will be lined as sad
And crookedly as fingerling potatoes in
    root-cellars dank enough
For overwintering. In Luckenwalde a
    young girl slides a needle
In the turnip-purple soft fold of her
    inner arm and this, too,
Transfigures to a kind of joy. Expertise is
    everything.
Angel, extinguish the tallows of the elder
    trees. (And he does.)
                           Death comes
Like another spotted foal born on the
    barn’s cold floor,
Spindling to stand, and he does.