Dog Days

The sun is slipping, and no manner

of frantic love, mindless drink

or runs along the darkening beach

can shore the thing up.

Night has lost its amniotic cradle

and now current lifts clothing

from our bodies until the sweat

turns cold and caustic.

We are on the inside lane

of the path across the ecliptic—

a constant speed suddenly ricochets

neck and spine like propulsion.

In some years the cant of our axis 

demands full attention,

the gradient so pronounced that

clean dishes crash to the floor,

children spill into the streets

after a toyshop full of balls,

and the truth cascades out 

of our mouths, unbidden.

In the dog days, about this time,

we ride bareback atop something 

immense doing its damnedest

to shrug us off. We hang on.

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