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Andrew Collard
​
Deep Cuts


​The specter of skinned elbows—kid blood—still scrapes and tumbles
down the driveway. Behind, the clicking of a baseball card on spokes,

the wash of passing cars out by the freeway like marbles rolling
off a wooden table, and the breathing of a neighborhood between.

Distance gives even the deepest cuts a context: every bruise, every lie,
every awful thing I've ever done bellows from where it rests

in time, cohering like an orchestra to song. Somehow, hurt turns
less severe, the way buzzing from a broken radio becomes a curtain

soothing me to sleep. Three hours in jail, or six nights in a bus station,
buried parents—the stretch of mornings after, when routine's quiet

compass only points to absence—childhood's persistent embers, too,
fall in, the way an aging tower reduces  to stone. To be abandoned

once, to grief, is not to be unceasingly abandoned; one cut, opened,
can only bleed so long. The body does its stitching like mourners sift

through rubble for a shard of bone, acknowledging the ache, or
it expires, and goes where broken bodies go, like crayons, back in the box.





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Andrew Collard is the author of Sprawl (Ohio University Press, 2023), winner of the Hollis Summers Poetry Prize. His poems have appeared in Ploughshares, AGNI, Virginia Quarterly Review, and elsewhere. He currently lives in Grand Rapids, MI, where he teaches writing at Grand Valley State University and edits poetry for Third Coast Magazine.
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