Commencement 2012
This is not
nature—the way
pain interrupts
its answers, ashen
awl-tipped
limbs waving
and brushing them-
selves, chill crushes
carried across
the ravine; and
a wing of
their broken flutter,
that desiccated
battle-din, is
hooked by a frosty
steam, and it balds.
Though the awls are
hollow-point—the un-
graspable locusts
having left
behind veins of shadowy
larvae inside them.
And the hollowed-out
scent of cold rain. And
suddenly—a corridor
of ropy light
twines round
the stems and
fills those absent
bodies with steamy
voices they cannot
share, cannot
reveal, retaining
a skin that shields
unerringly—And so
the sudden remains
only as an answer
the stilled silk
flowers
prod-up to reach
on this dog’s grave
(what symmetry
can gather itself
entire, in the
open air?)—a calm
tended to by
the wrinkled spines of
shucked chestnuts.
I would invoke
the radiance of the mirror
uncovering itself
inside the glistering
jetsam-spread of leaves, or
the receding waves of
these flowers, fathering
the dusk into them.
Spring 2011
This collection of torches convulsing in ink:
it is not what I wanted to give you.
All whites look older at night and yet
the tapestry has to include them…
I wanted you to sip this one swatch of light
that stands singly, and
the tan peasant wind that catches and fans
the thin milk of its undergarment, and
how morning blood un-hasps
the hatches behind sleep’s cogs, flooding
and the blasted furnace that risks ecstasis
according to…* Is this truly the color of my hands?*
I wanted to give you the searing first glance
again, wanted you to grab and fold
into that one swatch of cloth
and stay and raise your hands
and your children’s hands later when
I melt into cadenza and we waft hoarsily past these
pinewood rafters, records of starlings—then
till chance is at last served raw to stirring gods,
till I can’t name the scent of any ripeness
and no longer know what cool water means,
I will needle my eyes into
the position of afterstars. I will make
light trip and sift off sandstone in
the quarries. We have witnessed
too many rutilant past tenses.
Now I shall be the saver of pauses.
We will need breath later.
We erred. Sky should be easier.
I thought this would be different, this looking up.
I thought there would be a granary.
Winter 2012
1On the curt eve of November to make out of patience a new name.Shale-light, long scythes of it,2slicing through the turbid shadow-impressions of failed snow,pauses at certain angles and, inceasing to carve, deepens the engravingsof wind, hoof-prints, the murky aquatintafter-bristle of ferns iced-over andswept into new grooves...3As if justice cannot beserved to principle if the principle alone does not meltunder the surveillance of*force*—skittish, ever-4truant, this autumn wind ever-whetting itself, andthis light transmogrifying itself—a passing bird like a toss of chopped tobacco.And then, the light reconnoitering—5bossed lardy handfuls of itfallen, then cobbled in groups of two or three,among the yew-cones and in the paunchy creaseswhere the sidewalk abandons plot, sagging a little.And that single gob of it—horse-hair grey, crackling likethe fat toe of a god. After the curt melt of6this evening to wake up ina tree, into a grainin the growth in the upper left finger of the smallest branchin the very reddest tree. To sensehandlessness, then the catch-of-flint roil ofstatic—a canopy of hands. To feel my handstighten—lean—then loosen—and thento feel slenderin an unloosened light. How can one batethe tongue then, how can one judge what to savor andwhat to let turn frail andincendiary? And the light? How can one servejustice to a principleif body is one and the lolling limber light anotherthat lacquers it?7The dead have their lightless islandsand we, each new second,use that second to shuck off a secondself. All the while the small moldedbuhl leaves scattermildly, settling in our hair like cut-out lacunas fromsome fluted elemental music, inflaking November-light.I would not want, I think, in thisporcelain-light, to suffer the suddenness ofanother’s skin—to sensea shade as treacle, grey, curried, or white asleaves. There are still8the unraveling sprigs ofmy topcoat to contend with. And thenthe theater tonight.
