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Manna From Hemingway  

By Faye Branum

          I buy a book 

       At a grocery store;

      A collection of short stories.

     The author is a serious writer

     Seriously dead now 

      Countless years.

       I don’t pick up the top copy. 

        It might have something 

         To do with germs, 

          But more so 

          The crisp dust jacket of

          Fresh book.

          The crack of spine 

          Pushed open

         For the first introductory

        Gawk.

       On the opening page,

      At the beginning of each story 

     Lined with a quote 

    There’s a mysterious substance.

   I think of bits of book—

   News from the factory,

   A dusting of paper 

   Uniformly the same color

   In sundry singular shapes;

    A confetti of communion wafers.

     Has someone eaten

      A sweet of fine sugary flakes

      Food-like

      In a biblical sense?

     Must be manna,

    Ancient substance  

   Of wandering Israelites 

  Wilderness rovers

  Staying alive 

  On white caky stuff

  Now stuck to page,

   Between connecting sheets,

    Not easily brushed aside or 

      Effortlessly blown off. 

       I cover myself 

        In the dandruff 

Author

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