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						A Journey Through The Moonlight by Russell Edson 
						
						In sleep when an old man's body is no longer  aware of his boundaries, and lies flattened by  gravity like a mere of wax in its bed . . . It drips  down to the floor and moves there like a tear down a  cheek . . . Under the back door into the silver meadow,  like a pool of sperm, frosty under the moon, as if in  his first nature, boneless and absurd.
    The moon lifts him up into its white field, a cloud  shaped like an old man, porous with stars.
    He floats through high dark branches, a corpse tangled  in a tree on a river.						 
						
						
						
						
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