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FURTHER READING
Poems about Stealing
Against Pleasure
by Robin Becker
America
by Claude McKay
Cahoots
by Carl Sandburg
Learning to Read
by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Museum Guard
by David Hernandez
Some People
by Wislawa Szymborska
Stealing The Scream
by Monica Youn
The Man Whose Voice Has Been Taken From His Throat
by Naomi Shihab Nye
The Not-Yet Child
by Joshua Weiner
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After

 
by T. R. Hummer

After the explosion, no one knew what to do
For the boy who’d stood closest to the abandoned leather briefcase.
By some miracle, he was the only one injured. It erupted
In an incense of sulfur and nails as he made his way
To steal it. Holiness has an aura, everyone knows that,
But why would terrorists bother to murder a thief?
The ethics of this question paralyzed everyone in sight
While the boy, unable to breathe, watched God wandering
The station in a business suit, asking occasional strangers
Have you seen my briefcase? There was something urgent in it. 






Reprinted by permission of Louisiana State University Press from The Infinity Sessions: Poems by T. R. Hummer. Copyright © 2005 by T. R. Hummer.
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