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Corinna A-Maying the Apocalypse It was a geologic instant. Fine-bone plates moved under the Pawtuxet & up sprang West Warwick. In an instant the houses were up & the shutters open. Then the paint was peeling all over town. Then the instant passed with a shudder & all the houses fell down. The lilacs die. The lilies of the valley. April & May blow up & away. “We are ready to live as before,” says the last bald priest to the last white-May-dress girl, who touches her chalked hopscotch sidewalk & beneath her palm detects an earthquake & in a gutter puddle sees her skull & on her tongue catches a white blossom, the last one. With her chalk she bawls “The spring days are going to the graveyard.” The pet goat eats poison oak. The puppy bites the bitty lamb. All the kitty’s whiskers fall away. The little Lamb girl straddles a Chrysler Plymouth, queen of the car parade, with a kitty in her arm crook & a hand to the crowd. She calls out, “I can see the end from here” & tosses all West Warwick some Tootsie Rolls. The Chrysler driver blows his horn. Where have all the May-dress girls gone? -To the classroom, for learning Latin & blushing over Queen Dido’s open, bebassing mouth. The dust turns to tar. The rain to chalk. Undertakers cart snow angels away. 41 My hearse slides by a girl astride a puddle wearing her mom’s wedding gown. A downpour smacks Arctic, Natick, the Greenwich Inn. All the front door keys to all the places I have ever lived drip from the dogwood tree & chime in the wind. The girl in the gown sinks. The puddle turns to a pond. West Warwick, my West Warwick, drowns. Drowns world, my clapboard castle & the moonface I was living in. 42 ...

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