| Rebecca FoustALMOSTAnd it was almost a boy who leapt from her womb too early, blood
 hot and singing. He would not be kept
 in the dark one second more, but paiddearly for light; the air beat its fists
 against a mailed door. Blue of the blood
 unsuffused, blue body, blue Vishnu face. A passage was cleared but through
 too much debris, somewhere a vise
 already closing its jaws. The doctor knew, his eyes not meeting her eyes
 when she kissed the hands that drew
 her son into the world. Look, he arosethen took a breath, then slept, almost.
 * * *  FROG*Trapped in the pail the frog slow-arced
 in back flip,
 two extra legs half-folded, flapping
 like unbelted
 umbrellas. The radiointo the aquifer,said that the poison
 had not seeped
 
 that the poison not gotten as far
 as Slough Pond. It's true that Nature
 not-meddled-with
 makes her mutations  and does not deem
 them tragic.
 Still, sleeping I dreamed of my son,
 his genes expressed
 not as autism, but two extra thumbs
 on four hands,
 and I now want to blame someone; I want
 to drain that pond.
 Rebecca Foust's books Dark Card 
and Mom's Canoe won the 2007 and 2008 Robert Phillips Poetry Chapbook Awards, 
and her full length collection, All That Gorgeous Pitiless Song, 
won this year's Many Mountains Moving Book Award and will be published in 2010.   
Also to be released in 2010 is God, Seed (Tebot Bach Press), environmental poems and art  
from which this selection was taken. Her poetry has won several distinctions and has been published or is 
forthcoming from Atlanta Review, Hudson Review, JAMA, Margie, North American Review, Nimrod and others.  |