poetry book
I like the
generosity of numbers.
The way, for
example,
they are
willing to count
anything or
anyone:
two pickles,
one door to the room,
eight
dancers dressed as swans.
I like the
domesticity of addition—
add two cups
of milk and stir—
the sense of
plenty: six plums
on the
ground, three more
falling from
the tree.
And
multiplication's school
of fish
times fish,
whose silver
bodies breed
beneath the
shadow
of a boat.
Even
subtraction is never loss,
just
addition somewhere else:
five
sparrows take away two,
the two in
someone else's
garden now.
There's an
amplitude to long division,
as it opens
Chinese take-out
box by paper
box,
inside every
folded cookie
a new
fortune.
And I never
fail to be surprised
by the gift
of an odd remainder,
footloose at
the end:
forty-seven
divided by eleven equals four,
with three
remaining.
Three boys
beyond their mothers' call,
two Italians
off to the sea,
one sock
that isn't anywhere you look.
—Mary
Cornish