2 December 2002 | Vol. 2, No. 4

Fault-Line

I can tell my story


but I can't forget           there is your story


          a sort of companion to mine

                                                            connected by seam of rock and tree


                                                            the line between them is crushed

                                                  ground together

                                                                                like two continents migrating without water

                                                            painfully scraping the things in common


sometimes one end buckles

                                        doubling over itself

                                                            creating new valleys and perspectives

then tension escapes

in a terrible overlap where disagreements reside


          Stories are full of staggering truths

that are impossible to hold in even when your teeth are clenched

                    and those words tumble out from both sides


                                        You tried to give me an ocean in a breath, a glacier in one swallow

                                                  there is nothing now: nothing more than a few frozen islands

                                        the time is for silence


                    I only reach for things that don't want more than I can give.

                              But I forgot to tell you about the plot—

About the author:

Hannah Leah is a quiet voice in the dark winter of Portland, Oregon. Her poetry has appeared in her paintings, a CD entitled Under the Joybox, and in Prosodia, Sand to Glass, and the Women's Journal of the Claremont Colleges. She can be reached at .

For further reading:

Browse the contents of 42opus Vol. 2, No. 4, where "Fault-Line" ran on December 2, 2002. List other work with these same labels: poetry.

42opus is an online magazine of the literary arts.

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