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ANALEMMA
Nica Giromini | Poetry
The day I turn my back to you
to speak, in order
to, in older words and think
I never told you apart,
we look in a line. Nearly
tied to words, half-living,
that with each turn change
by half. Like it is June
still the sun outside turns
the pale grass while
you hide from it.
All we scrawled at one
another’s features speaks
only for itself—dead’s last
earthy letter
echoes like the word. Hear
it out: we learned our first
tongue by listening
to what is said, what’s
not, and never start
to speak like that again.
Nica Giromini’s poems have appeared in The Kenyon Review, Poetry, and Bat City Review. He is a PhD student in English at UC Berkeley.