Monday, July 26, 2010

The Space Left Behind

BWI

July 25, 2010

I am devoted to solving puzzles with some of the pieces missing.

It is not like making chicken tikka without the chicken,

Nor linguine alla Bolgnese without fresh semolina dough.

It is more like sautéing pignoli in extra-virgin olive oil,

Without fresh oregano,

Or sharing coffee and a golden croissant without the dollop of crème fraiche.

Instead resorting to cream, clotted or otherwise.

Missing parts are a fact of this life today, and life always.

I am in the airport, now.

Missed flights, missed phone calls, missed appointments,

Missed relatives, missed opportunities,

Missed signals, missteps, missed places in line.

A gangling cluster of men in fatigues, joking and laughing,

About to be deployed to a war a half-world away,

Wondering, in the recesses of their minds,

Who among them will go missing, and when.

The Crusader, returning from Asia Minor

To his cold sod home in northern England,

Missing his left eye, which he left on a field of battle

Outside what we call Constantinople.

His submissive wife, missing both her man, who left her 6 years ago,

As well as missing her lover of 6 years,

The grist miller of the Saxon village,

Who gave her the freshest grain when she drew her Sunday water near the mill.

He himself missing 2 fingers on his non-dominant hand, lost when his heavy woolen coat

Caught the leather strapping of his draft horse on a cold night in England’s November.

And his dog, missing her back leg when his heavy, slow wagon slipped its wooden chock

Rolling down the nearly level but slightly sloping rough cobble path to the sod house.

What existence there is, we fill,

With downy feathers of measures and dealings,

To occupy the space left behind.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Recess

Hanover Thunder

July 21, 2010

Harness, so heavy on my neck;

That glare of light,

Wrongly bestows any sense of freedom.

Bareness, so empty is my cup.

That drop of rain,

Falsely slakes my thirst.

If not for unfinished business here,

Could I turn myself around?

In a world lit only by fire now,

Humanity scarcely makes a sound.

The words are no longer recognizable.

The purpose, no longer plausible.

The faces, cold and all alone;

This new and tranquil situation.

I was never good at interpreting dreams,

But a voice shares a part of another phase.

Between drops of rain weave the soft seams.

The garment makes sense now, the cloak of repose.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Fireflies Shining

Windham, VT

July 10, 2010

If light can somehow warm the sand,

Why is it so hard to penetrate

The layer of the tissue underlying?

If kinsman follow a different path,

Why is it so effortless

To replicate the myths that should be dying?

“I only follow orders,” she said,

Above the anguished cries;

Light multiplied like fireflies shining.

The truth,

The truth does hurt.

It injures like a thousand darts,

Multiplied into a million points of light.

It can cut you like a saber,

Clear cuts the forest down;

Indiscriminate action on the pasture.

But when you reach the underside,

Down to the lower ground,

The air is cold and still within the rafter.

It is at that point, for some,

Creation begins again.

This launching of the light produces shaking.

From within and from without

Fractures form and disappear.

Those million points of light begin breaking.

That light begins escaping;

That light begins escaping.