since may 11, 2022

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oesa magazine

For artists, by artists

Nonetheless, I consider the Language of Windfall

POEM

By Natalie Rice

I watch the snow come and go—unsure

of the difference between absent


and returning. The body is always

both at once, as is the cottonwood.

In its back—a hollow


snag I hadn’t noticed

until you pointed to it. The physics


of desire requires a falling body.

At my feet, is the peeled skin


of some small, wild dog. Silver twitched

and marbled, my instinct is to look up.

Buddhists would say

that underneath our ordinary lives,

there is a fundamental groundlessness—


what’s more true:

the juncos skirting waxberries

lacelike an inch above the earth, or

my malleable soul hovering

just above my head? Last windstorm,


a cottonwood

shattered the driveway. I saw it


quick and glinting. One owl rose—backwards

and then forwards—nothingness

is windswept and unclutched. In that darkness,


I let myself in.