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						Late Moon by Philip Levine 
						
						2 a.m.  December, and still no mon  rising from the river.     My mother  home from the beer garden  stands before the open closet     her hands still burning.  She smooths the fur collar,  the scarf, opens the gloves     crumpled like letters.  Nothing is lost  she says to the darkness, nothing.     The moon finally above the town,  The breathless stacks,  the coal clumps,     the quiet cars  whitened at last.  Her small round hand whitens,     the hand a stranger held  and released  while the Polish music wheezed.     I'm drunk, she says,  and knows she's not. In her chair  undoing brassiere and garters     she sighs  and waits for the need  to move.     The moon descends  in a spasm of silver  tearing the screen door,     the eyes of fire  drown in the still river,  and she's herself.     The little jewels  on cheek and chin  darken and go out,     and in darkness  nothing falls  staining her lap.						 
						
						
						
						
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