Dumb as Oaks
It is wind that speaks,
not the branch, the leaves
now gone, silent unless
trampled. Cry out.
When the branch breaks
it is the ice that sounds
the crack. Its tiny fingers
cannot help but hold or fall.
Melt will be months coming,
a long hibernation, unslept,
beard grown to length,
urge quieted down to resolve.
What is it we wait for,
dumb as oaks, gone as the grass
beneath swayed hills of snowdrift?
Certainly, there is something in that light.
The slant the birds know means:
nearly there, just wait for the
winds to shift, the familiar call
of that place is home too:
That branch that won't break.
Monday, December 3, 2012
Advent 1
Empty Handed
The pleasure of
people standing
empty handed:
voices carrying
between bodies
or silence curling,
smoky breath, exhaling
into a thousand
possible utterances.
Exiting a building,
near sundown:
This world glows.
Friday, November 16, 2012
Fidelity
Secondly, I am not afraid because I love you,
But because I love you, I am afraid: what comes
Upon us all, sometime comes to one of us. It
Would not be fair to want it either way, the
Suffering internal, held up as sacrifice, or
External, to serve as best I could while you
Bear the burden for us both. An act of infidelity
Either way. Too much to ask for all to be well?
But when it strikes, it may not conquer, then:
Let it be me. Some part of me longs to suffer.
Only a fool admits this, in a poem or otherwise.
Worse still, with strength hardly tested beyond
Ache or strain. Then again, first things first,
How else can we know the limits of love than to
Make the promise that the body could never keep?
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Letter 1, October 17th
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Contemplation
Brother Leopold appeared to be stuck.
"Get the Prior."
"Get Fr. Thomas."
He just smiled. Looking at nothing. As if a set of scales covered his eyes. It was a strange look, but the smile was stranger.
When he came to, still smiling, he said: "We've been wrong all along."
--------
I'm practicing. Foundling Review is holding a 50 word story contest this summer. Details: http://www.foundlingreview.com/PachaasContest2.html
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Proof
”[...] Everything in me
Wanted to bow down, to offer up,
To go barefoot, foetal and penitential,
And pray at the water's edge.”
[Seamus Heaney, ”Triptych” III: At the Water's Edge]
It wasn't the picture I was after,
the picture was proof.
The truth is: proximity was all
I desired.
That somehow closeness could prove
friendship, connection,community
led me to the side of the road,
against the barbed fence,
to the edge of the water.
Sometimes seeing is all prayer is.
Or is it: prayer is what seeing is?
Of the three prayers:
praise, forgive, & need,
I prefer the blue heron,
two legs in the water,
bill stabbing southward,
crown raised or fallen.
The moment wings stretch
into lazy flight is
prayer answered
& prayer denied.
There is no sense in waving
as you disappear.
But I have this picture,
& this poem as proof
against the slow current
of doubt.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
The Heart Does Not Turn to a Stone
a body once known remains,
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Two Poems
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Fragment 22
Sappho, Fragment 22, from If Not, Winter (Anne Carson) |
“The spirit moves, but not always upward…”
[Theodore Roethke, “Meditations of an Old Woman”]
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Direction
In the beginning: oppositional Mars was not more than a pink speck, slightly larger than the rest, in the East above my neighbor’s house.
Somewhere down a long, familiar road an old love appeared new in the odd Winter's half-light. Falling in love with the shape of a tree in February has as much to do with skyline, the distance beyond, a cut of light, & sky so pink it might be flesh, as it does with the way the skinny bones reach out to embrace their own emptiness, want of nest, bloom, leaf, or errant kite.
But here, in this hurtling car, my sounds are less than nothing: beat, breath, synaptic fire: silenced by the friction of rubber & road, glass & wind.
(Suddenly, I recall the almost visible ribbon of geese I heard in last night’s darkness, still calling, now more necessary, perhaps, as their bodies blend into the midnight, blue-black vacancy. Is it wind they follow, or are they pushed by a force they do not know, a stream, though invisible, that they are more comfortable swimming in? They were gone as quickly as they arrived. Silence persists.)
Here, now, Mars, moon & Venus all down, or at least invisible, the meditation ends as one last streetlamp extinguishes, the trail of its light a chromatic halo, ephemeral, like a last note of birdsong or the final syllable of a hummed matin.
And I am alone again with all my doubts, all my loves, intact.
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
For Love
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Caliper
"The cemetery expands its borders—
little milky crosses grow like teeth.
How kind time is, altering space
so nothing stays wrong; and light,
more new light, always arrives.”
[Spencer Reece, “At Thomas Merton’s Grave”]
What instrument do we use
to measure the capacity
of one’s character to
absorb loss?
The lies we live with
slide smoothly down the rule
only when the points
take & hold, without
slipping.
Then one day the beam breaks:
& every measurement is off.
------
I thought I'd always measure loss
on the little silver Mezurall
my father left in a drawer
(for me?)
It's in another drawer today,
(I kept it in a pocket for a while)
but I should have known:
Its length was never going to be enough.
-----
Your sister let each of us who were to carry you pick a pair of your socks from a plastic bag on the day we buried you. I chose Da Vinci’s calibrated man with his legs stretched into a pace that I'd never be able to keep.
-----
A life is lived on a hinge
that swings between eras
of unequal lengths & depths.
Sometimes it is a simple wind
that turns the gate between identities.
Then, again, storms destroy
what seemed so likely to stand,
so solid,so protected,
so easily measured.
When things finally settle again
& what’s left is gathered:
there is usually enough
to build the world again.
But once the rule is broken:
the measurements will
never again be exact.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
88 Words
We arrive here improvised. [Szymborska]
Schedules persist whether we mind them or not. Thursday waits for no one. On a Wednesday two boys were born. Today was Wednesday, but the world lost a quiet poet. She survived more than her share. Sometimes one wonders if Saturday will ever come again. Or if Monday doesn't end soon, will all the artists stay home to save their cats from empty apartments. As it is, I'd rather be stunned by Sunday's silence: hear that? No, it was nothing, only one more minute clicking away.Tomorrow. Already.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Anecdotal
that change creates loss as it provides gain,
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Departure
Maybe it is loss that breeds
a need for absence, a going
that suggests distance & time,
when so many days end in a slipping away.
If I can imagine a line of friends,
loved ones, the marginally close
lining up to bid farewell, do not
mistake it for a death wish,
or a longing for the inevitable rise & fall of disease,
but a silent need for an appreciation
only recognizable through sustained longing.
Maybe not longing exactly, but being missed,
having the shared space emptied,
not breaking the vessel, always fragile,
just on the brink of disrepair,
but leaving behind footprints & a bit of dust,
knowing that I'd come back,
if only for the clutter, but not soon,
not too soon.
A decade is a considerable time to live in the same somewhere:
to occupy a house, to work a room, to wander a hallway.
Though dreams arise, fall, & reemerge, a made place must change or be left behind.
There is a second image lingering somewhere behind these lines,
the portentous one that tries so hard sometimes to become fact:
a family gathering their most precious cargo, strapping down what they love &