Blackbirdan online journal of literature and the artsFall 2017  Vol. 16 No. 2
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back LEAH FALK

States and Instructions for the Universal Machine
after Alan Turing

Let the body be a difference,
engine that pries and hauls the fence
separating the loose world:
bridge of teeth
snapped from the gums,
ghost of the child to come.

~

A woman is called to the yard
as a family quietly
loads their pockets with pears
from her dying tree.

~

Out of the dead,
no stalk grew as expected
or gorged its capillaries
on the color of heaven.

~

What, then, ran
in the veins? Rain
on twenty umbrellas
at the churchyard.

~

Repertoire for eye and eraser,
pointer and thigh. A world built
in a few movements: stop, look,
speak, move on.

~

At the university, the chapel towers grew awhile and,
as they neared the limestone body’s end,
suddenly swerved—hoarded breath
in fists of iron.

~

Could we have built the world
with only these directions?

Raise and lower the pen.

~

And with only:

Halo of flies
around the hair.

The sound of ore going back
to a favorite vein.

The heart,
gnarled fruit, let go
from its tree.  


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