Bus Tickets, Buffalo to Toronto

Emily Gordon

The only paper left to print

the tickets to come visit you

is linen finish I last used

for a New Yorker cover letter,

a résumé, enclosed, folded,

scored, a sheet full of ink-looped

practice signatures,

those hopeful watermarks,

that unanswered wish,

transferred into this

half-answered wish,

this homemade currency

I might exchange for you.

 

There were vats of rags

in a cauldron of slurry

pressed by Fourdrinier and me

into costly billets doux

the papers I will have on me

when stopped on the border,

my identity, for now,

my destination, possibly,

 

carried by a rash nighttime charge,

a searing desire,

a Neon Bus, round trip,

my admission made probable

with a recycled ink cartridge—

the last of the lavish paper,

the last of my grand demonstrations,

without promise of reception,

without guarantee of delivery.

 

Emily Gordon grew up in Wisconsin and California and is a longtime journalist and editor. Her poems have also appeared in The Baffler, The Women’s Review of Books, Painted Bride Quarterly, Indie Soleil, HIV Here and Now, Transition, and the Toronto Globe & Mail. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut, and is a sound improviser for the Dirty Little Secrets show in New York City.

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