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  • The World
  • Jennifer Chang (bio)

One winter I lived north, alone and effortless, dreaming myself into the past. Perhaps, I thought, words could replenish privacy. Outside, a red bicycle froze into form, made the world falser in its white austerity. So much happens after harvest: the moon performing novelty: slaughter, snow. One hour the same as the next, I held my own hands or held the snow. I was like sculpture, forgetting or, perhaps, remembering everything. Red wings in the snow, red thoughts ablaze in the war I was having with myself again. Everything I hate about the world I hate about myself, even now writing as if this were a law of nature. Say there were deer fleet in the snow, walking out the cold, and more gingkoes bare in the beggar’s grove. Say I was not the only one who saw or heard the trees, their diffidence greater than my noise. Perhaps the future is a tiny flame I’ll nick from a candle. First, I’m burning. Then numb. Why must every winter grow colder, and more sure? [End Page 8]

Jennifer Chang

Jennifer Chang is the author of The History of Anonymity (VQR Poetry Series, 2008). She co-chairs the advisory board of Kundiman and is an assistant professor of English and creative writing at George Washington University. She lives in Washington, DC.

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