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Poetry by Mary Virginia Micka, CSJ
Pas De Deux |
 | Design and timing, and exquisite execution of swift dance, and once again the pracrised mouse escapes. A dark potato place she knows shapes her a kind of sanctuary where thanksgiving prayers phrased to a narrow life swell now beyond the interstices of her ribs until they breathe above the mould aureoles of inexhaustible sweet grace to sing her home.
And yet, whose pleasure's this? Say if you can the cat's -- still, inward, burning toward his own design of final seizure and deposit, thus: loop of a silver paw and on the carpet four pink feet gathered tight as rosebuds in a wreathing light.
In My Best Voice
Then there's this pile, all my various utterances, some of which I've decided are priceless
precisely because now and then one will really act like an utterance i.e., when I say it aloud to myself in my best voice, it resounds sometimes twice, filling the whole space even if at the time I can't remember ever having said anything like that to anyone.
Except, of course, God.
Which in my book goes without saying.
As for the rest of the pile, that's priceless, too, come to think of it, in ways crying out to be dealt with directly.
Which I will do.
- Mary Virginia Micka, CSJ
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