Fables for these Times

I am amazed by the story where a man pulls 
two ships weighing over a thousand pounds
across the water and to the shore. Granted,

the distance is only fifteen meters and not
the length of the Suez Canal— but not a single
tooth bursts from his mouth. He backs away

from the edge of the pier, hands rowing
air on both sides of his body as the ropes
gradually give up their slack. He’s done

other hard things like this before: pulled
a train thirty-three feet across the rails
also with his teeth, and twenty cars

with a harness strapped to his back.
Besides the weight, do the ships, trains,
and cars have symbolic value, does he

do this for a reason other than to break
a world record? I'm also in awe when I
hear of grandmothers forming patrols

on the periphery of schools, of random
strangers rushing to the aid of humans
pulled out from behind counters

as they flip burgers and fill orders
for soda and fries. I want to hear about
happy endings where the trickster

rabbit outwits fox and greedy wolf, where
the spider weaves threads and carries cruise
ship workers across the ocean to safety.

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