Poetry
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DEUS EX MACHINA
I guess if we get to be here today A box of elderberry lists behind the alcove .... Then description fails the reader and we are left with only shapes and patterns. Still a single leaf trembles on the breeze. Emblematic, a lovely badge, serrated and at peace, with the day that has flowered beyond the notion of our need. Where the reader lists. The poet buflds a room, it can be small or grand depending on the tone as in June her garden is real. An intricate lace of affection to correspond when wanting fads. Perhaps a yellowed doily on your grandmother's nightstand like a tune, long off, played on a toy piano. Clink. These lapses from time to time fill hours and cars on the highway. A room to include your ramble, as well as itinerant interlopers visiting from unforeseen lake districts-with its news of festival fights and famous contests- where the song dies down into rotting hulks, trunks exposed at the sleeve of the shore. These transitions or seams if you like inform me. Water and land disguised as matter. A carcass dressed and open for inspection revealing nothing but process, lovely and inescapable from our own play. I was waiting behind the skene, worn, ravaged from too many trips to the provinces, too many performances, too many nights accosted by the rabble. Some people got a lot a gun. What makes you different? Show me. Here's a dime. Call your dead and find out what they've learned. Having been too preoccupied vith the house and its metaphors and where the objects would lead them. Too selfish to watch out for us. Abandoned, beautiful and wide-eyed, developing the tools to maintain the glorious liberties we carry in our hearts and pockets. Then something else did come to stand in its place: namely you. Which is where I'm going tonight, despite the distance from seam to shadow. For I am relative to your I, while this page walks into my side, where the sun sets. It's a special fight this. When evening takes a sip off the din of long endurance, becalm, be near me always--book. So I and I and I we go. Together under the ehns. Won't that be nice? To watch one by one all the colors grain out of the sky into our organs.
If I could tell you this |