The Knicknackery Issue Five - 2017 | Page 33

33

Measures of Viability

Agatha Beins

Sometimes they die as a fish: still,

wet, only halfway here and slippery

dreaming of gills. Sometimes they slide

through innocent as milk and cookies.

They are always ravenous.

Some die as delight.

Some die carnivorous. Some die

black. Some die as roses, trying

to find a way back

to the bud’s tight lips past

the thorns that are not thorns, at least

according to the biologist, though your hands

may disagree. Some die as a name

that inks your tongue like

a peeled red beet. Some die in the

subjunctive, just a wish

for a different future: some would

die, some would die as if.