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        |  |  |  Tomás Q. Morín
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 Royal Silence
 
 
 
 This much I know, as I came down the mountain
 and the valleys were revealed and my ears
 clogged so that all I could hear was the inside
 of my own head, I became a brother for a while
 to the nineteenth-century hunter who dressed
 in that green between olive and ivy, the one the Jets
 still wear, though they haven’t been in the hunt
 since Broadway Joe wore pantyhose for Beautymist
 or danced around the Orange Bowl like a buck
 in rut darting and dodging across a field of blue
 daisies in late fall, a dumb creature to be sure
 for all its nobility, and I probably couldn’t
 ever shoot one, not that I’ve tried, besides
 someone said you shouldn’t carry loathing
 in your heart when you aim at a deer or a grouse
 or a bear, which it would pain me to do,
 especially the bear, who can sound like a Hare Krishna
 when he’s happy, his head bobbing, every huff
 and grunt in a clear timbre, except when he’s angry,
 the bear that is, his pitch is closer to a bull’s
 or a bullfrog’s, a bull bullfrog declaiming
 in a Polish accent that silence is royal,
 and natural, and that the world only speaks
 when we have committed a sin or two
 against it—this is an old ribbit, he says, retold
 over and over through history; think Memphis
 and Rwanda, think Chile and Warsaw, think
 New Delhi and Granada where that romantic
 disciple of everything green who is dead, who was shot,
 that sleepless King of the pond, still croaks
 into the green wind Verde que te quiero verde
 loud enough to wake the dead and keep them so.
 
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