A groomer of wigs knows certain tricks.
A laundress knows of a lake that washes blood
from a prayer shawl.
A blind man
can remember precisely
the roads of his boyhood, the tilted face
of the last girl he saw leaning toward him.
In the unvisited lanes so many are waiting.
What have you learned
between music and the gray winter rain?
Yehoshua November
Yehoshua November’s poetry has appeared in The Sun, Margie, Provincentown Arts, Adirondack Review and others. His work has received Prairie Schooner’s Bernice Slote Award and was selected as a finalist for the Autumn House Poetry Prize and the Tampa Review Prize for Poetry. His first collection of poems, God’s Optimism, won the 2010 Main Street Rag Poetry Book Award and will be available from Main Street Rag in August: www.mainstreetrag.com. He can be reached at yehoshuanovember@yahoo.com





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