The Festival of Almost Getting There

By Renée Ashley
At the festival of almost getting there
Zeno pokes his head out halfway, asks
 
directions, half-heartedly, to the train,
admits he’s been riding on the tortoise,
 
been running after arrows to watch them
stand still. He understands course, path,
 
way, even relative position (dichotomize,
divide) but motion’s still a figment:
 
distance halved and halved (split infinity,
twin trajectory) the long, long way, and all
 
that longing (two-fold, doubled) (moments,
instants, continuous or discrete) for some
 
unfamiliar end—such unforgiving progress,
portioned, yes, bisected. A half-assed effort?
 
No, he’s as good as got it. So much struggle
and amends. Sure, we’re goddamned tired of
 
this much waiting, but look! He’s halfway there.
 

Copyright Credit: Renée Ashley, "The Festival of Almost Getting There" from The View from the Body.  Copyright © 2016 by Renée Ashley.  Reprinted by permission of Black Lawrence Press.
Source: The View from the Body (Black Lawrence Press, 2016)