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Egress

One who has suffered enough, you can love yourself to death.

Eight Lines on Burning My Hand and Other Poems

I can remove my hand the second it becomes too much for me.

Eight Poems

O Fatima if only you would lean my way my heart would quiver.

Electricity and Other Poems

I screamed every word and waited for the stones to answer back.

Elegy for Sammy

I have to wait till day to tell you that you’ve sunk down below sea level.

Elegy for Suzanne Nash Gurin

Her songs, her records—I entered them. I jumped in and out of myself.

Elegy Written in Dust Kicked Up along a Back Road

He took off his clothes and left them on the living room floor.

Eleven Days

Once she said, “Dying is nothing, but . . . the separation!

Ella Says and Other Poems

The signal’s too remote and there’s a delay before we can start again.

Emergency

The blade was buried to the hilt in the outside corner of his left eye.

Emily

She heard the lowing of cattle, shouting, the crack of whips.

Emo, 2005

Here we were, seventeen, trapped by the sheer number of bodies.

End of Story

Here is my father on the last day of his exceptionally long life.

End Times

I pictured myself as a chart inside her head. Two sides: good and bad.

English

Her voice smelled like an orange, though I’d never peeled an orange.

Eulogy

“People think Sean is a screwup. I want them to know him as I do.”

Euthanasia

My brother, only his son by the way he fixes his tie, blind-fingered.

Even-Steven

“Your mom is awake,” I said. “You need to go in and see her.”

Everyday Ending

My husband once said he wanted to die eaten by a panther.

Evil Onions

Overnight, somebody had dumped a dead pit bull in the trash bin.

Exaggerated Honey and Other Poems

There is the ghost of a child in me. It longs to die, so afraid of living.

Exhibits: After the Dam Flooded the Town of Vantage

You can dive still see half the Spanish castle, its stone pile a trap

Extra Days

Janet Burroway

Fame

A nearly perfect guitar fell from the sky and landed in my mom’s azaleas.

Family Portrait as a Collection of Bones

My husband collects bruises, counts how many rise above the skin.

Farallon

He wondered how others lived with their sins. Maybe they never did.

Father’s Day

The celebration stops, like a sparrow hitting a sliding-glass door.

Feeding the Lions

If someone looked into his eyes they would see how ugly his mind was.

fever dream sonnet with Francesca Woodman

you crawl into a hole & pull the hole in after you on judgment day even our mothers will flee from us.

Field Notes, Sketches, and Watercolors: Birds of the High Plains

She examines her left hand, finger by finger, gripping and pinching the flesh.