|  | Errors 
How wide the gulf between o and i:He loves with his wife and daughter
 in New Haven, his bio read.
 An accident of the hands, funny
 in the way wrecks often are.
 
 But don't discount the hands,
 the way they know the girl will return
 one day from college with her arms spilling
 like her mother's once did. How he'll see
 her almond sweater and the snow
 
 as it stops in the window, and he'll wish
 he'd had sons. He'll be vigilant
 from here on, aware of the sanctity of letters.
 He'll realize as never before that his wife's
 and daughter's names both begin with C
 
 that they are both about sight,
 about water. The difference between live
 and love will expand to dive and dove,
 and he won't know present
 from past, past from flying.
 
 For now, he sometimes opens
 his wife's shirt in the kitchen,
 and wants but does not want
 to find someone lookinghis daughter,
 the mowing neighbor, anyone
 
 as if to confirm, so that he may say
 in the end: Once, there were two bodies
 in the same place, and one of them was mine.
 
 
 
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