Life Gone On

by WC Roberts



Heat Made Simple forgot to mention 
how the flesh drips like a wax dummy
when taken to extremes. Blue and red 
wax for the anatomist in his book 
of maps - therein a body lies 
inert, the honesty of veins, 
cosmopolitan 
arteries going no place, 
estranged and faraway moon 
with the burning . . . everything else
is lost, with sticks of dynamite 
and a Molotov cocktail. Heat 
the only thing sustained 
at the point of ignition, 
more earth than sky. The sun 
melts my wings, the flesh drips, and 
life goes on. But not for me. 



WC Roberts lives in a mobile home up on Bixby Hill, on land that was once the county dump. The only window looks out on a ragged scarecrow standing in a field of straw and dressed in WC's own discarded clothes .WC dreams of the desert, of finally getting his first television set, and of ravens. Above all, he writes.


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