Friday, November 5, 2021

SCATTERED

 

So many different rains tonight,
their slender gray thoughts
scattered everywhere at once.
Perhaps the wind can somehow
bring these factions together;
perhaps by morning a consensus
may at last be reached.

Monday, November 1, 2021

Thursday, October 28, 2021

ALWAYS SOMETHING


There was always something

between us left unsaid,
a trembling silence unable to
carry itself across those
stuffy winter-white rooms.
There was always a pause,
always an ellipses undefined,
hovering like fragments
of speech between breaths;
the long, slow minutes building
monuments to themselves
while we waited, hardly aware
that we were doing so.
Whatever it may have been
has long since passed,
along with those others
we once referred to as selves,
two who would not answer
us now, no matter the words,
beautiful or otherwise,
we might choose to speak
or, knowingly, leave out.

NOT YET DONE

 

We are not yet done
talking, you and I. The pause
in our speech has simply
outgrown the words
that once contained it.

Monday, October 25, 2021

FIDELITY

 

She was always faithful
to you, she said.
It was only to herself
that she had sometimes
been untrue.

Thursday, October 21, 2021

WHAT MY FATHER FOUND

 

My father says that he remembers nothing
after finding my grandmother, thrown as if by
force upon the kitchen floor, her blue eyes gone
blank as river stone, blood not red but black,
reaching as one hand did into the stillness of air,
the other held inward, as if cradling a book
which no one could have seen or deciphered.
He remembers the amber bottle of arsenic glinting
in sunlight, the maddening shouts of the crows,
the strange weight of his own breath hovering;
remembers walking slowly back to the car,
easing it up the gravel road to the Halverson's
to start up a game of afternoon baseball.
I cannot pretend to know his thinking in these
moments, or whether all thought simply fled.
Yet in my mind's eye I see him, unwashed jeans
dragging at the heel, the bill of his cap pulled low,
walking much the same as I did at that age,
hands in pockets, gazing vaguely at the ground.
I can see him kicking at the dirt, signaling,
his worn H&B bat suddenly connecting, startling
the barn swallows out of their secret chambers,
the thin, red stitching of the ball turning
and turning, fast upon itself, shooting past
the billowing tops of summer trees; and below,
the lengthening silhouette of that farm boy
running, running toward a fierce blinding light
where, for one imperceptible moment,
he somehow manages to all but disappear.

Monday, October 18, 2021

CELEBRATION'S END

 

Once, you thought you had all the time in the world. Maybe you did. But now the world is spending that time like a soldier on leave, throwing mountains of confetti for a party already nearing its end. The handful of guests remaining speak so softly, as if in code, imperceptibly moving away while standing still. The music, too, grows fainter, reduced to a residual hum, a melody remembered from childhood rising and falling again. You find yourself picking up the half-drained glasses, overflowing ashtrays, stacking mismatched dishes in the kitchen sink. It looks to have been quite the event, one that won't come around again. You only wish you could remember more. Who was that bird-like woman speaking your name so intimately, embracing you with abandon? What of that man leaning in too closely, talking politics all night, demanding your stance on the latest referendum? Next time you will take mental notes, leave a guestbook at the door for all to sign as they leave, hopefully still laughing, bright strands of paper clinging to their heels.

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