The End of Illness is the End of Metaphor

Sarah Gorham

—Joseph Brodsky

She was the pebble in the soldier's shoe,
hunger that hardens into bone.
She was the comet;

see the crater it left behind.
The warning too and the one
cloud over a sunstroked sea.

She was "anaesthesia," "theosophist,"
"perambulator" and other words
that tangled the tongue.

She was the baby of a large man
in the body of a tiny woman.
Her will was a watermelon

wedged into a garden hose.
She'd always be like this,
always disagreeable, always alone.

Then one fine morning, a sliver of hope:
she watched a tooth disintegrate
inside a glass of Coke.

Drink this, someone said,
and thus commenced her dream:
The stone began to crumble,

to melt like a bullion cube.
For a pebble could be made into soup,
enough for her

and the soldier,
the entire village, even. No one
would ever go hungry again. The End.

University of Virginia Virginia Quarterly Review
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