THE SWAIN'S INVITATION
The barn is warm, come inside, lie down,
sleep. Here, no sleep ever fails
in jumping, tears it’s dug or anything
else tender on the fencing’s barbed wire
and, losing all the grace that true
jumping is made of, leaves you, flushed
to start all over again counting.
If later on in the night one sheep, over
another, appeals, stirs in you, somewhere,
something, be easy, no gate will fall
closed, forbid you trespass; what you want-
why shouldn’t you, why can’t you? Take it:
the easy-to-grip flank that has always
worn your mark on it; for pillow,
the woolly side, still trembling,
after; the broad tongue, meat-pink,
for washing a thing back toward clean,
that place where, at last,
there’s no trouble in sleeping, or
dreaming, or in remembering, by dawn,
only how tired you were, how warm the barn.
--Carl Phillips, Cortége
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