We found my cousin in my uncle Trevor’s barn, he slit his arm from wrist to elbow and back again.
Hey lay there twitching, a goldfish in broken glass, they shook him, begged, pleaded, I said: "Let it be– he’s gone, gone, gone."
There’s a sweetness in the worst things.
My room was bare, so I hung a fuchsia over my bed. The blooms hang heavy, thrusting pistil, dripping spores; almost obscene, withered and ignored, they fall to the floor.