Saturday, March 23, 2013

my own dachshund


I just read the essay
About EB White, his wife, his dachshund
Waiting on hurricane Edna
Nestled in their home
While the sickly moon outside
Is crowded by the wind
And the bullying clouds

And I saw the small warm room
As a floating window frame
Like the ark set loose again in a flood
And I was God as
A benevolent peeping tom
Watching my creatures from the woods
As they cast the only light for miles

And as God, I saw the tired dog sniff
At the radio console
And my eternal chest longed
For my own dachshund
My own radio and a wife
And would my greatest pleasure be
To protect her, or to have her hang her arms
Round my shoulders while she pressed her chin to me

And the rain would tap and the wood
Would creak around us
My dachshund would sleep
With his nose tucked under his tail’s tip
And the light from the bulb would bow around us
Like a guardian angel

Sunday, March 3, 2013

earring


I look for it, the dash in my ear lobe
and I thread it
slip a stiff wire through the slot
the metal and glass hang off me now
and it seems to cast a flattering shadow

down my cheek
like a black line at the edge
of a japanese print
I sharpen into a woman.
And I see the steady glare of it
The blinding strike of it

how hard it must be on other people
the parting red
and the cutting white
of a woman
Impossibly hard
and, oh,
so
graceful fainting
like the folds in a statue’s robes

I see a long distance
look in those eyes
That’s a woman too.
Smoke signals
saying all is well
always well

When she looks at me
I am in love,
I feel her like a lantern
Gripped at the end of my arm
Like an arm - catching me
Wrapping my waist from behind
before I fall

but try as I do
I cannot meet her stare
just a glance at her earring
is all my heart can bear
just the sight of her jaw
and that black line belting her in

Oh my dear girl
this is loneliness

little apron


how did she stand it
how did she make her way up the mountain every morning
a solitary white figure
in a gown
and little apron
washing off the omissions
from the day before
in nothing but sunlight
and foxgloves
and the snake passing through the garden
how did she look to the morning
with such friendship
when I
look at it now like a beetle
with long legs
crouching in a corner
when I know that lately
the fault
lies with me
that I am foolish
that i start myself
by counting on another
by wishing
by shaking my fists
and there she walks
toward the moonlight
covered in the dust of her day
straight and filled with something
private and
song like
and I tear at myself
for nothing
imagination
knowing what’s true
and slapping its face
for all its frank care
I am glad she cannot see me
gathered up in my daydreams
waking scared
tapping my fingers for reimbursement
all of me
like some kind of pencil doodle
flaked out on a napkin
while she stands 
a mighty stroke in silence
with only a slight twitch in her pale hand
to let me know
that her life
is a loaded gun

Friday, March 1, 2013

That darkness is nearer than I


That darkness is nearer than I, Mother
Holds you in its belly, growing you
Wasting you
That frost meets you sooner
And I, about the daylight
Resisting all the hands nearby
My brother’s, as he cups the air to tell me
Of the sinister miracles in space
Coming for me
That darkness is nearer than I
And the universe
Burns a trail to his front door
And his
And his
And hers
And mine
To all the rare of me
Their warm palms
Tucked under pillows
Or draped on slow, resting chests
I wonder where my lips are
Far and
Wasting
Cold and still
As a bluestone marker
Placed with love
In a frosted lawn