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FOUR WAY REVIEW

Kerrin McCadden

by Four Way Review / Thursday, 19 April 2018 / Published in Uncategorized

HOMING

The sky is at the feeder again.
I mean the indigo bunting
with no bearings for home.
A man pulls into the driveway

after work—crunching stones,
hallooing up the stairs—
wanting to know about my day.
All the days are wranglers,

I say. I am not able to cite
my sources, but I make a list.
A woman at lunch said we do not
plan to live two hundred years
,

and so I think to tell him
—well, I do not plan to live
two hundred years!
In my hands,
pillowcases I bought, embroidery

floss. Everywhere I go I think
about what is impossible.
Can homing pigeons carry
their nth letter and still get lost?

My job is to build a home,
I tell this man I have already built
a home with. My job is to do
something with my hands.

 

LATE WINTER

In a handful of seasons,
water and cold dirt

In a handful of seasons,
water and cold dirt

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About Four Way Review

Four Way Review is an electronic literary journal from non-profit, independent literary publisher Four Way Books. We publish poetry and fiction from both established and emerging authors through our open submissions process.

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