Saturday, February 20, 2010

December Morning Poem

Below a scarf of snow
the ground has ceased to shudder.
With a heartbeat slow as sunrise,
it sleeps as if beneath glass.
My breath ruffles solemnly
into the fishbowl air.

I tap
my feet,
the whole world rings.

Halves

If Jack and Rose had spent less time kissing
they might have made it to a lifeboat.
They could have both survived. Nothing
keeps a sinking ship from going under.

It still feels unnatural to have breakfast alone,
to stop myself from thinking to grab two forks
and spreading hot sauce on what would have been your half.

Remember the night we missed three busses
in a row, the last lifeboats of the night, and we
were so cold and tired and you
were so mad, and then we met those people with the telescope
who showed us the moon.
In that dancing lens there hung an unbelievable
white city, frozen and old as a glacier.
I saw that teeth-white orb more clearly
than anything on earth.

If Romeo and Juliet had thought things through
they might have made it,
but at least Juliet never had to see that half-empty
bottle of hot sauce on the shelf
every single day.

Holes in the Prairie

The night I watched you dance alone
the floor between us sank into a valley
of certain and impassible hours.
Your hands, as they patted the darkness so near,
flew far beyond my grasp,
even if I had stood and danced
we would not have been dancing together.

As children we ran through woods unafraid
of pathlessness,
with leaves like feathers against our faces.
We could not be lost, not in summer,
branches were made to hold us.
We must be as children again, soap-clean,
not touching,
and while I want you sleeping beside me
I do not want
to wake beside you naked anymore.

There are no songs of this particular regret,
of this one lonesomeness,
the knowing that our friends
must only be our friends.
Just as crows must eat the dead.

And prairies must be burned to bloom.

Things must be as they are.
We must walk in the dark,
I must watch you dance,
We must be as we have been,
ourselves, apart.
The certainty of this return
is a shudder of relief.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Borrowed Body


All summer I rode on a borrowed bike

with a borrowed helmet and a borrowed lock.

My lungs gathered luminescence

and I grew lean around them,

riding long and light.


The wind blew in off the lake

in heaving hot and cold.

Miles out, lightning stung the water,

we lay down in the dark in the storm.

Your mouth was a thundercloud,

our bodies moved like the rain.


We left the beach with sand in our socks

as the fog drew strings around the moon.

With itchy breasts and damp tangled hair

I understood how it is to be a woman:

To pass through things, to be passed through,

To take what does not belong to me

and build it

into this body.



finally summer



In the last hour of morning

everyone pretends to be asleep,

lying still and heavy as the rising heat.

Finally

your hand reaches from your sleeping bag,

finally

I feel your fingers on my shoulder blade,

they move like a mouse beneath drying leaves.

I am as patient as a seed.

Our eyelashes are the dark fringes

of ferns in the forest

as we pretend to be asleep.


The lake tosses, a fitful dreamer,

summer sprawls open-mouthed.


A cicada calls.

It is the pause in the air

before we kiss.





Cicada



A cicada, newly risen, navigates my skin,

beneath the soft unhesitating touch

I too stretch my wings.

We have both lain for so long untouched,

now we unfurl knobbly and new,

fresh and unfolding.

Does the soil ache as cicadas are borne up bursting?

Summer is a weight on my thighs,

a soreness in my most hidden bones.




(sun)



In the morning we shared a mango
as pulpy and yellow as the sun.
The world gleamed with a summer sheen
so we sat outside and let the leaves
cast shadows on our hangover eyes.
They cast shadows on themselves.
How self-contained, those trees,
how quietly they gather in the light.

We were pass-out-drunk the night before,
the drunk of scholars sick of words,
the drunk of getting lost, eating snakes,
falling down steep banks
where the railroad meets the river tracks.

And all those cups of coffee drunk from styrofoam,
what chemicals did they leave in our bodies?

My friend, you laughed
when I kissed the eyelid of your drunk left eye,
it fit on my lips like the lips of a bottle.
For once we did not speak,
and they found us asleep on the kitchen table,
lying side by side.




Vocabulary



Is it platonic or plutonic? you ask, every time imprecise until I reply,

though really we are neither, how can we be,

our eyes half-closed, awake too long, poorly packed in tired skin,

improperly defined.

We lie on the porch, two lumpy cigarettes,

watching the ions of the air.

The snow is too slow for your patience, you say,

All other words plod off on peripatetic feet.

Each phrase floats face down,

silences pass like quicksilver suns.

Are we made of shadows or fire? Magma or perfection?

Really we are neither, here

on the penumbra of perception it is so late, here

your hand is on my sleeve.

I am cursed by your propinquity,

whatever that means.




Fire Alarm


Certainly we had been up all night

filling our mouths with bread and cheese and cinnamon,

gargling with the stars.

And certainly we had made sure the stove was off,

the pilot light burning low

like a moon on the horizon.

But when our fingers touched

the fire alarm began to ring,

sprinklers sent the whole pajamed house

stumbling out to the sidewalk.

They stared incredulous at our

wild wakeful eyes.




Friday, July 10, 2009

spirits

A cemetery full of mulberry trees near Wrigley field,
the fingers of the dead are stained purple.

Our lips are stained, too. I gaze at the tight confluence of your jaw
as we lie in the dapple-gray light.

Everyone that we love is the ghost
of a firefly once caught in some glass jar.