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Zeno at Zero

Listen to Mary Kinzie reading this poem.


The skin, at first like dust, began to loose
The torment of the flesh to airiness,
All his body's bounds from their duress
Relinquished. A reluctant and diffuse
Grace attends this as if the long fuss
Of waiting were no trial, the dinginess
Swarmed out upon his dying powerless
Against his scorn's degrading animus.

He had no life to speak of, no career
After the first depressions, waiting out
The world's compulsive exercise of skill
And constant, low-pitched bragging. His one fear,
That he would seem a supplicant. No doubt
He lasted as he did by rage of will.

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Mary Kinzie is the author of Ghost Ship and The Cure of Poetry in an Age of Prose.
Click here to visit Robert Pinsky's Favorite Poem Project site.To submit poetry to Slate, send up to five poems and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to: Robert Pinsky, Slate Magazine, Boston University, 236 Bay State Road, Boston, MA, 02215.
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