She stands pigeon-toed in too-large
plastic sandals, her Sunday dress
white with orange ruffles, mouth a simple line,
gold studs in tiny ears, close cut hair,
a slight welling in her eyes. Arms motionless
at her sides, she does not hide the stump ends,
the burnt meat's wrinkled darkwhere
the soldiers cauterized her wounds.
As they'd been taught, they tried to
make the cuts just above the wrists. But
amphetamines had them shaky; the girl
kept moving her arms. She is eight years old;
the soldiers four years older. They fight
for an army named The Lord's Resistance.
When the cuts are made above the elbow
the soldiers call it "short sleeves."
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Winter Feature 2009
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Feature
- Poets in Person A walk through Philip Levine's Brooklyn (HD Video)
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Interview
- Philip Levine Our Questions for Phil: An Interview
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Poetry
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Book Review
- David Rigsbee reviews News of the World
by Philip Levine
- David Rigsbee reviews News of the World