Another Last Time
ANOTHER LAST TIME
If you're blessed with one,
and choose to stick around
long enough pay the slow
unfolding its due regard,
to watch a child grow
is to undergo a million
little deaths, gentle as a daisy
daggered in your back
or a blade of grass drawn
deftly across the jugular,
a wound so delicate you question
whether you’re being
a bit melodramatic
about the whole thing,
until one morning they’re
not so little anymore
and you experience the big
death, the one where you die
to your long-held notion
that you have somewhat of an idea
of how the world works.
Don't worry, though—
the dead are those who know
there’s always more dying to do,
which is what the children
were sent here to show you,
ushering you along
the backwards way to
the gates of the deathless city.
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