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Prairie Schooner 77.4 (2003) 54-55



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Scar

Rigoberto González


How deep is your love? How
deep does the razor sink
into your cheek before
you taste it? Only trees

know the blade's invasion,
the evidence engraved.
But no oak's battle scar
will be immortalized

so fiercely. You love me!
The exclamation mark
will hide beneath your skin
but it will scream and scream

like the whistles of those
distant streets you wander,
where your stitches flaunt to
strangers the ghostly sheen

of a clean incision -
so exact, a master-
piece. The craftsmanship's mine;
that is my signature.

A vision called to me:
on your face the beauty
of a knife slit haunted
me, so I carved it free. [End Page 54]

I hold your head up like
a trophy, rub your scar.
Please promise it won't cut
back. I don't like to bleed.





Rigoberto González is the author of So Often the Pitcher Goes to Water until It Breaks, a selection of the National Poetry Series. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship and currently lives in Seattle.

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