
When I was young, I drew
sculptures on the beach,
holding tight against reckoning
waves,
In bold ignorance of all to come
they stood, looming
weaving a hope that some day
they might come true
The fantastic scenes of monsters
slain under bedclothes before
frights could reach me
sleeping soundly,
Of lovers conquering the grand
canyons that tore them asunder,
heedless of the cost in gold,
in bloody bruises.
****
They wash away.
Like hearts, broken each
morning in screen glass.
Like loving words, silenced
by callous hallway echoes.
Like dawns, swallowed
by unbending night.
Like wonders, captured
in the eye, forgotten.
They wash away.


Carter Vance is a writer and poet originally from Cobourg, Ontario, Canada, currently resident in
Gatineau, Quebec, Canada. His work has appeared in such publications as The Smart Set, Contemporary
Verse 2 and Plentitude, amongst others. His debut novel, Smaller Animals, is now available from
Roundfire Books.

