POEM

Little God Origami

by Stefi Weisburd

Stefi Weisburd
The number of corners in the soul can't
compare with the universe's dimensions folded
neatly into swans. In the soul's
space, one word on a thousand pieces
of paper the size of cookie fortunes falls
from the heavens. At last, the oracular
answer, you cry, pawing at the scraps that twirl
like seed-pod helicopters. Alas, the window
to your soul needs a good scrubbing, so
the letters doodle into indecipherables just
like every answer that has rained
down through history, and you realize, in
your little smog of thought that death
will simply be the cessation of asking, a thousand
cranes unfolding themselves and returning to the trees.

This poem originally appeared in the March 2005 issue of Poetry.

March 2005 issue of Poetry Magazine

BUY THIS ISSUE »

 Stefi  Weisburd

Stefi Weisburd’s The Wind-Up Gods (Black Lawrence Press, 2007) won the St. Lawrence Book . . . MORE »

Listen to the Audio

Related

More Art & Science Poems

More Cycle of Life Poems

More Religion Poems

More Free Verse Poems

More Metaphor Poems

Report a Problem