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SELECTIONS Seth Abramson Martin Seay Jim Simmerman Bob Hicok Alice Friman Albert Goldbarth G. K. Wuori S. Gruen John Brehm David Kirby Lesley Quinn Christine Garren Natasha Sajé Roy Jacobstein Rebecca McClanahan SHOP Subscriptions Gift Subscriptions Current Issue Featured Back Issue Back Issues Advertising |
Natasha Sajé T Ursula is sure hybrids are sterile, like mules. I say or in packs, but they can breed. Were arguing in a restaurant what constitutes a species, whether Australopithecus she wants things fixed, I like them open? Or about names a baby. Why argue if theres no money or land at stake; with a beach that separates men and women with sunhat and shorts. Yet Im invisible to the women; Irishman and Italian-Austrian Jewdid they debate Bern, and my Germans shot with English, or should I say jackass. That beach suggests a different century, not lions and tigers shouldnt be bred. Ursula and I tangere, touch. NATASHE SAJÉ is the author of two books of poems, Red under the Skin (Pittsburgh, 1994) and Bend (Tupelo, 2004) and many essays. Her essays on poetry have been published and are forthcoming in the Writers Chronicle, among other journals. She teaches at Westminster College in Salt Lake City and in Vermont Colleges MFA program. She spent the spring of 2005 in Slovenia as a Fulbright scholar teaching the sociology of art at the University of Ljubljana. T appears in our Autumn 2005 issue. |