Lusions, by James Ragan
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In the laugh belly of too little thought,
a lusion is eating up the mind
for nothing. It needs no compensation
for the distance it will travel or the time
it takes to eat the hum of reason
out of tongues. It is only the brief
nuisance of its love for laughter
that keeps the mind whole.
In the laugh belly of our prehistoric skulls,
lusions like tumors in the brain
grow secret terrors into what is taught.
Each day our hunger turns to silence,
we lose another thought.
From “Lusions” by James Ragan. (Grove Press Poetry Series: 185 pp., $20) Copyright 1997 Reprinted by permission.
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