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God Failed to Cross the Length of a Wheel’s Circumference
  This is the way the world ends
  With the baby’s face piercing out of the darkness of Mary’s cradle
  Into a shaft of light that illuminated the town
  No, that did not happen.
  Barrels and hay on top of old wagons
  They hug each other so tightly although
  They are mostly in love with themselves
  Like the townspeople
  Bundled up against the cold
  Poor, hungry, ordinary,
  Each with his own suffering
  Suspended between a bored gray sky and a cruel white earth
  February engulfed these little ants, crawling and crunching,
  And swallowed them with meager drops of honey
  Too bitter it vomited snow.
  A damp despair draped over the town
  Like a sheet of wet black velvet, only it was white
  But aren’t they different shades of the same color,
  Like suffering and indifference?
  It was a census
  And every head counted just about the same
  In the blinding snow
  That fell on every head just about the same
  It was a census
  Until the savior comes, they heard
  But the wagon wheels are circling birth and death
  And God failed to cross the length of a wheel’s circumference

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This poem is written in response to two of Pieter Bruegel's famous paintings: The Census at Bethlehem and Landscape with the Fall of Icarus.